Apps, iPhone, and more at core of Apple's WWDC

CNET News brings you complete coverage of Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference 2009, with live updates on the latest products and developments related to the iPhone, Snow Leopard, and much more.

Featured coverage

iPhone 3G S First Take

The iPhone 3G S offers attractive features, better battery life, and faster performance, but we wouldn't recommend it for everyone.

Can Apple beat the too-expensive rap?

At WWDC, Apple reveals new pricing that shows it's being realistic about the economy and competition.

Apple refreshes iPhones, MacBooks, and OS X at WWDC

It unveils a faster version of the iPhone, as well as faster notebooks. It also showed off the upcoming Snow Leopard software, iPhone OS 3.0, and more.
• Live blog: WWDC 2009 keynote

Latest coverage

Apple releases Mac and iPhone WWDC 2009 video sessions

Apple released a collection of videos that were recordings of the Mac and iPhone sessions at this year's developer conference.

FCC welcomes Apple iPhone 3G S

Crave gives you the details on recent cell phone filings with the FCC.

How the iPhone can overtake all gaming handhelds in five steps

The iPhone 3G S is one small step for smartphones, but one giant leap for Apple's dominance in handheld gaming.

Friday Poll: Which of your hopes did Apple dash?

Sometimes what's not said at a company's big event is as important as what is. What were you hoping to hear more about at Apple's WWDC but didn't?

The iPhone 3G S: Coming to a country near you

Following its initial debut on June 19, Apple will release the new iPhone 3G to 80 countries throughout the summer. CNET has all the dates for your convenience.

iPhone 3G S and OS 3.0 photos

CNET rounds up Apple's photos of the iPhone 3G S. Also, revisit iPhone OS 3.0 with screenshots from our iPhone 3G.

iPhone OS 3.0 revisited

The iPhone OS 3.0 will be available June 17. CNET takes a second look at the new features it will bring.

Hands on: Apple MacBook (13-inch, white)

Apple's "last" MacBook is the same from the outside, but the insides are nearly as good as a MacBook Pro. Can you live without a longer battery and an SD card slot for $200 less?

The gap in Apple's MacBook lineup

After Monday's announcements, there are no longer any unibody MacBooks, only MacBook Pro models. It raises questions about the future of the company's laptop lineup.


ie8 fix

Credits

Editor: Anne Dujmovic

Designer: Vibol Peou