Drugi jezik na kojem je dostupan ovaj članak: Bosnian
Source: Adweek
Remember life before apps? Sure, it was liveable. But it was also a time when we owned paper maps, knew phone numbers and recognized the dating potential of next-door neighbors.
What would happen if all the apps in our current app-run world suddenly just … blipped out?
That’s exactly what Apple imagines in “Appocalypse,” a video that kicked off Apple’s annual World Wide Developers Conference (WWDC).
In it, a new Apple employee finds himself housed in the company’s Cupertino Data Center. While digging around for an outlet for his desk fountain (an iffy thing to have in a server room), he unwittingly unplugs the actual servers, resulting in the disappearance of apps on iPhones around the world, kicking off an instant global crisis.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FC0pT9xg1oI
“Appocalypse” brings a host of cameo appearances, with social media influencer Brittany Furlan distributing hard-copies of her selfies; meanwhile, in a shady and weird App Store black market, Tinder founder Jonathan Badeen can be found hawking himself, along with other human wares.
In the end, “Appocalypse” isn’t meant to be seen by most people. It’s intended to stoke the imaginations (and fan the egos) of developers. “Keep making apps,” the ad concludes, “the world is depending on you.”