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I have a WWDC ritual. Every year, right before the keynote starts, I rustle up some comfort grub (one year it was stuffed-crust pizza; the next, it was a tub of Ben & Jerry's Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough ice cream), fire up TweetDeck on my iPad, and settle back to enjoy Apple's big reveals with streaming video on my laptop.
This year's WWDC keynote promises to be one of the most exciting yet. We'll most certainly get a peek at iOS 8 and the next version of OS X (Yosemite? Big Sur? Bakersfield?). If we're lucky, we'll see some new hardware. And if we're really lucky, Dr. Dre might just close the show with a rap performance.
Apple's WWDC keynote will be live-streamed from Moscone West in San Francisco on Monday, June 2 at 10 a.m. Pacific Time. That's 1 p.m. on the east coast. Here's the link.
And here are all the ways you can catch it:
ON YOUR MAC
You'll need: OS X 10.6 or later running Safari 4 or later. We're pretty sure it won't work in Chrome.
ON iOS
You'll need: an iPhone, iPad or iPod Touch running iOS 4.2 or later. That's pretty much every recent and not-so-recent iOS device—yes, even the first iPad, which runs iOS 5.
ON WINDOWS
You'll need: QuickTime 7. And Safari for Windows. It might also work in Chrome as long as you have QuickTime installed, but we'd recommend downloading Safari for Windows just to be safe.
ON APPLE TV
You'll need: A second or third-generation Apple TV running software version 5.0.2 or later. The video stream should have its own tile.
ON A CHROMECAST
Just pulling your leg.
ON TWITTER
Our intrepid Apple reporter, Christina Bonnington, will be live-tweeting the keynote directly from Moscone West. Follow her: @redgirlsays. Also, follow @GadgetLab for the big headlines.
ON WIRED
We'll have a continuously updating post of all the news — check back later this morning for the link, or just go to the front door of WIRED.