If they are similar enough structures that you could figure out how Apple's chips work from their talk, they aren't going to talk about that and invite a potential patent lawsuit from Apple.
There already was a lawsuit. It was dropped for a reason, and it wasn’t “OK. We’ll let you build it as long as you don’t talk about it.”
While Apple has many patents related to their processors, there is also a lot of things that we can learn about the design that is not patented. A lot of what Apple implemented comes from extensive shared research that Gerald Williams III participated in before he got to Apple, and was partly why he was hired by Apple.
Key to that was research into overcoming the memory wall with heavy out of order architecture. Several papers were written before Apple embed on its current path, none of which I have access to. However, key one if you want to try to get into it is “Kilo-instruction processors: overcoming the memory wall.”
it is very likely that there are similar design characteristics between Apple’s cores and Oryon. I don’t think any Apple design specifics will be revealed, but I do believe that if the presenter gets into the principles applied to what Oryon can do, it will give insight into what Apple is doing.