I'm sure I'll get flamed for this, but I like the old way they did it with an audience. Much more energy, which I think is worth more than the over-the-top polish of the pre-recorded versions they do now.
You are not the only one. Live presentation to an audience present in-person and their reactions presented a higher level of communication, a significant human factor. What used to be interactive, now seems rather robotic …I'm sure I'll get flamed for this, but I like the old way they did it with an audience. Much more energy, which I think is worth more than the over-the-top polish of the pre-recorded versions they do now.
Agreed. The audience reactions were always over the top and not genuine reaction. It added nothing. Applauses for everyhting said however insignificant.The "audiences" of many of the old events were mainly Apple employees, hand-picked sycophants and vetted journalists so it's not like those reactions were completely earnest and genuine anyway.
That's just false... any proof to your claim? The applause in the old Apple events was always in line with the size of the crowd. When it was a packed out Moscone West centre for big announcements, it was not only the Apple employees that made that volume and depth of applause. And the smaller intimate events like at the old Apple employee small conference room, it was a much shorter, quieter clapping less screaming applause...The "audiences" of many of the old events were mainly Apple employees, hand-picked sycophants and vetted journalists so it's not like those reactions were completely earnest and genuine anyway.
A generation of 'Apple WWDC mistakes' or 'Angry Tim Cook moments' has been swept from under our feet!!!100%.
Live Keynote with pause, with interaction with the audience, with live bugs, … those are memories.
Today’s keynotes are too scripted, too forgettable.
Gosh, I'm glad somebody said it. I miss when the executives or team leads were presenting. Now it's very niche role titles and I can't help but think they're being selective to highlight that aspect.yeah more fun with the audience! all the forced inclusion and women presenters gets on my nerves 😂
ha lets hope I don't get cancelled. yes I meant it not a nasty way, it just does feel all forced and a little fake at times!Gosh, I'm glad somebody said it. I miss when the executives or team leads were presenting. Now it's very niche role titles and I can't help but think they're being selective to highlight that aspect.