Apple Computer has pushed its annual developers conference from May to June, and switched locations, so that the conference will coincide with the release of a preview version of the next update to its operating system.
The five-day Apple Worldwide Developers Conference was originally slated to take place from May 19 through 23 in San Jose. On Friday, however, the company said the conference will now take place from June 23 through 27 in San Francisco"s Moscone Center.
The change occurred so that Apple could give attendees an early version of "Panther," a forthcoming update to its Mac OS X operating system, according to the company. Other than the name, not much is known about the software, sources said. The code name goes along with the jungle theme applied to other names of Apple products. The current version of the Mac OS, Mac OS X version 10.2, is sold under the name Jaguar, and an Apple-developed browser goes by the name of Safari.
"Our annual Worldwide Developers Conference provides our developers an in-depth look at the future of the Mac platform, and giving everyone a preview release of Panther is the best way to do that," said Ron Okamoto, Apple"s vice president of Worldwide Developer Relations. "Moving to June ensures that every developer will leave the event with a copy of Panther in their hands."