iOS 5 and iCloud for sure, but what about voice-search, widgets and iPhone 5? We'll have the news as it happens.
Apple's WWDC show kicks off in San Francisco at 6pm GMT, and this summer event is traditionally the diary date for a series of major announcements from the firm.
This year Apple took the unusual step of issuing a press release pre-announcing the key topics for CEO Steve Jobs' keynote speech at the show.
It explained it will unveil its next generation software including iOS 5, the next version of Apple’s mobile operating system which powers the iPad, iPhone and iPod touch.
It will also confirm details of iCloud, the much-discussed cloud services offering. It's expected this will be the 'new iTunes', with streaming access to users' music and video collections. But little is known for sure about how it will work and who Apple has licensing agreements with.
But what else?
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Well, iPhone 5 is the big one. The consensus right now is that this will not be revealed tonight, as Apple has historically debuted a new iOS a few months before any new hardware is unveiled.
But if Apple springs a surprise and gets out its new phone, the biggest change to the time-honoured form factor could be a curved screen.
Back to iOS, the blogs are mostly focused on a few key areas.
First is how iCloud will hook into it. One theory is that iCloud will begin the process of making all Apple devices cordless – doing away with USB sideloading, and permitting the setup of new iOS devices just by logging into an iTunes account.
A second area is new push-notifications system, which would enable app developers to communicate more directly with their users. It's an area that firms like Urban Airship have done well to mine, but which Apple is believed to be looking at.
It did the same with community gaming, for example, but its in-house system (Game Center) doesn't seem to have affected specialists like OpenFeint and ScoreLoop too much.
Another interesting addition could be widgets. These are well-established on Android and are occasionally offered direct by handset makers like Samsung, but are missing from the iPhone landscape.
Decorating your handset with weather, clock or calculator widgets is much beloved of Android users. Maybe iPhone users are about to get a taste.
There's also a growing rumour mill around Apple's voice-activated services. It bought Siri just over a year ago, after all. Siri lets users speak searches into their phones in order to received local listings and offers.
Is this about to be rolled directly into iOS?
Finally, there's NFC. Most observers seem certain that there will be no news here, despite the many patents filed and people hired by Apple. However, some bloggers have claimed that NFC payments are about to be unveiled at Apple retail stores.
Seems unlikely without a new NFC hardware launch.
But with Apple's track record of 'one more thing' surprises, you never know...






















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