Stock Markets
Daily Stock Markets News

Apple Vision Pro Tim Cook and NBA Commissioner Adam Silver Interview – The


Tim Cook wanted to know more about the stats. 

The Apple CEO was huddled over an iMac in the NBA’s league headquarters in New York alongside NBA commissioner Adam Silver, flanked by a wall of regulation basketballs. On the white table in front of them was the computer, and a piece of hardware that Cook says “really changes everything.” 

Apple Vision Pro. 

The NBA had been hard at work on a dedicated app for the device, and two of its developers, senior software engineers Lauren Marshall and Matthew Parrott, were walking Cook and Silver through its features, like the ability to watch up to five games at once, the possibilities of immersive video, and, as Cook inquired about, real-time stats that can be displayed next to the live games. 

Cook and Silver, in a joint interview shortly after the demo, were effusive about the potential of the device to transform not just how people watch sports, but all entertainment content. 

“I’ve seen several demos of the output of different games, and it’s just mind blowing, it’s so much different,” Cook said, when quizzed by The Hollywood Reporter about the potential of the device. “It’s hard to go back to the 2-D world after you’ve been in the 3-D world, you just don’t want to do it.” 

“I think what the marketplace is going to do now is cause other content creator organizations — not just the NBA — to look at the transformative nature of this and start investing,” Silver added, recalling a meeting with Cook years earlier in his office, where the tech executive urged the league to invest in its own direct-to-consumer operations. “There’s a strong incentive now for us to take this global content and find ways to distribute it around the world and create an even more engaging and immersive experience. So I think you’re going to see a lot of content creators saying, we need our own developers, we need our own engineers. We can’t just leave it to others, and that’ll raise the bar for everybody.” 

Cook’s tour of the NBA league office took place the morning of Vision Pro’s release day, Friday Feb. 2. Just a couple of hours earlier, Cook was on hand to open the doors of Apple’s flagship Fifth Ave. Store, with employees counting down from 10 to signal Cook to swing open the oversize glass doors, and a line of die-hard Apple enthusiasts waiting outside to pick up their Vision Pro devices. Cook shook their hands as they walked in, and stuck around for selfies and to chat with buyers. 

A few blocks south and a few hours later in the NBA office, Cook says that many of the first customers he spoke to that morning were developers looking to get their hands on the Vision Pro so that they could experience it for themselves.

He adds that, similarly, Apple is also deeply invested in getting the Vision Pro in the hands of creators who will create original content for the device, partners like the NBA and Disney, yes, but also people like filmmaker James Cameron, or Jon Favreau (who helped create an immersive dinosaur experience for the device that has to be seen to be believed). 

“We started talking to a lot of creators, and everybody is blown away by the storytelling that can take place in this versus the tools of the past,” Cook says. “And so my gut is there’s going to be a lot of people running towards this, but we’ll see.” 

In the NBA’s office, of course, live sports is always top of mind.  

The league’s app had been in development since shortly after the Vision Pro was announced at last year’s WWDC. 

“We had a lot of discussions about immersive environments versus the shared space where you can have apps living side by side,” says Chad Evans, the NBA senior VP, head of product and platform. The Vision Pro allows for both, the ability to envelope yourself in an environment like a theater, or an environment where you can simultaneously access other apps. “When we think about the fan experience, they want to be able to talk to their friends about the game. They want to be able to access their social media apps. And so we really thought about this multi app environment where you can surround yourself with NBA content and how can our app live in that ecosystem.” 

Evans adds that actually trying the device was “sort of this aha moment,” allowing his team to understand what they wanted to do. 

And then there’s the potential for immersive video, which can put users at the center of the action. 

“I think the fan wants to be a part of the game and a part of the action, and there’s nothing like being in Vision Pro and…



Read More: Apple Vision Pro Tim Cook and NBA Commissioner Adam Silver Interview – The

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Get more stuff like this
in your inbox

Subscribe to our mailing list and get interesting stuff and updates to your email inbox.

Thank you for subscribing.

Something went wrong.