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Lion and iOS 5 and iCloud, oh my! (video roundup)

Apple CEO Steve Jobs uses the WWDC keynote stage to introduce the company's new iCloud storage service. The Lion version of Mac OS X and version 5 of iOS also share the spotlight.

CNET News staff
2 min read

Apple CEO Steve Jobs kicked of the Worldwide Developers Conference today by introducing the company's new iCloud storage service. The Lion version of Mac OS X and version 5 of iOS also shared the keynote spotlight. Here are a handful of short video clips from the presentation. For more details about what was announced, visit our story roundup here.

Watch this: Steve Jobs takes stage at WWDC

At Apple's WWDC in San Francisco, Steve Jobs opens to a warm reception from attendees. Jobs came back from medical leave to announce new Apple products.

Watch this: Apple introduces multitouch gestures in Lion OS

At the WWDC conference in San Francisco, Apple's Phil Schiller talks about new features coming to Lion, Mac's latest version of OS X. He demonstrates multitouch gestures, which give users the ability to swipe and tap through applications and the desktop.

Watch this: Steve Jobs introduces iCloud

At Apple's WWDC, Steve Jobs introduces the concept of iCloud and how this service relates to the Contacts, Calendar, and Mail apps.

Watch this: Apple demos iCloud photo-stream

At Apple's WWDC in San Francisco, Apple's Steve Jobs talks about the company's new cloud photo service. Users have the ability to take a picture on one device and then it automatically shows up on multiple devices.

Watch this: Apple introduces iTunes in the cloud

At the WWDC conference in San Francisco, Apple CEO Steve Jobs explains the new iTunes cloud feature that will allow users to instantly put all their iTunes purchased music on all their Apple devices.

Watch this: Apple announces iTunes Match
At the WWDC conference in San Francisco, Apple CEO Steve Jobs unveils iTunes Match, part of the company's new iCloud service. For a $24.99 annual fee, users can use iTunes Match to scan their music library for non-iTunes purchased songs. Apple then provides a DRM-free file of those songs for access from iCloud.