Google I/O sells out in less than an hour
Google is widely expected to show off new details of its Project Glass headset at the I/O developer conference in June.
Hugo Barra, director of product management at Google, unveils the Jelly Bean operating system at the company's I/O developers conference in 2012. Tickets to the 2013 I/O conference sold out in less than an hour.
Reuters
At 10 a.m. Eastern, Google officially opened registration for its Google I/O developer conference, which will be held from May 15 to 17 at the Moscone Center, in downtown San Francisco. Less than an hour later – or 49 minutes exactly, by – the event was . Last year, of course, Google I/O tickets within twenty minutes. Still, 49 minutes ain't too shabby.Â
So why is Google I/O such a big deal? Well, for one, even though the ticket price is high – $900 for members of the public, $300 for academic faculty and students, to PC Mag – the gift bags tend to be worth the price of admission alone.
Consider, for instance, that last year, I/O attendees a Google Nexus 7 tablet, a Google Nexus smart phone, and the Google Nexus Q ´Ç°ù²ú.Ìý
Meanwhile, this year, there's the matter of the Google Project Glass headset, which is expected to be the centerpiece of the I/O conference. Although Roger Cheng of CNET doubts that Google will actually be giving away free high-tech spectacles, he that "there are high expectations Google will wow the audience with new [Project Glass] features and apps."Â
Back in February, Google announced it would allow Twitter and Google+ users to apply for a chance to test out Project Glass. But there was a catch: Even users who were selected had to pay $1,500 in order to pick up your test device and attend "a special pick-up experience" in New York,ÌýLos Angeles, or San Francisco. A listing for Google glasses subsequently appeared on eBay; it was quickly removed by eBay staff.Â
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