Worldwide Developers Conference 2003

Worldwide Developers Conference 2003 (or WWDC 2003) was a computer conference that was hosted by Apple Computer for its developers in 2003.

Venue
The 14th annual Worldwide Developers Conference was originally scheduled for May 19 to 23 at the San Jose Convention Center, but was rescheduled to June 23 to 27 and held for the first time at the Moscone Center's West Hall in San Francisco, California. Early bird registration was extended from April 18 to May 23, 2003. The change was made to ensure Apple's development team to had enough time to have a preview release of Mac OS X 10.3 "Panther" ready for attendees.

Announcements
WWDC 2003 included demonstrations of the Power Mac G5, Mac OS X 10.3 "Panther", the launch of Safari 1.0 (concluding its beta phase), and introduced the iApps: iPhoto, iMovie, iDVD, etc.

Attendance
Approximately 3,000 developers attended. Attendees received Apple's first model of the iSight web camera (to coincide with the launch of iChat AV), pre-releases of Mac OS X 10.3 and Mac OS X 10.3 Server, the O'Reilly book Cocoa in a Nutshell, and a 17-inch notebook carry bag. Apple also screened the Pixar film Finding Nemo for attendees, ahead of its premiere in cinemas.