![]() At WWDC 2002, Steve Jobs famously kicked off the event by giving a eulogy for Mac OS 9 as part of the transition to OS X in 2009, Snow Leopard - the last version of OS X before Apple’s rebranding of “iPhone OS” to “iOS” - was officially unveiled at WWDC in front of over 5,200 developers and in October 2010, Lion, the eighth major release of OS X, was formally announced and demoed at Apple’s self-hosted “Back to the Mac” media event.īut as Phil Schiller told Daring Fireball’s John Gruber, with Mountain Lion Apple has started “to do some things differently”. ![]() For the past decade, Apple has been relying on media events and developer conferences to serve as the stage for official introductions to major new versions of its desktop operating system. Given how important Mountain Lion - the latest version of OS X, available today - is to Apple’s ecosystem and unification strategy, its announcement was rather unusual. ![]()
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