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Tim Cook says AR & VR will be revolutionary, but the public will need education

Apple CEO Tim Cook has been traveling around Europe and spoke about his thoughts on augmented reality, saying it will be profound but that virtual reality only has some specific uses.

Cook spoke about augmented reality in a recent interview with Dutch news outlet Bright, saying how important it will be in the future.

"I think AR is a profound technology that will affect everything," he said. "Imagine suddenly being able to teach with AR and demonstrate things that way. Or medically, and so on. Like I said, we are really going to look back and think about how we once lived without AR."

He also believes that virtual reality has specific uses but shouldn't make up a person's entire life, as advocates of the "metaverse" seem to be looking for.

"I always think it's important that people understand what something is. And I'm really not sure the average person can tell you what the metaverse is," Cook said. "It's something you can really immerse yourself in. And that can be used in a good way. But I don't think you want to live your whole life that way."

Apple has been helping developers integrate augmented reality into their apps with technologies such as ARKit. Rumors also point to the company launching augmented reality headsets.

Programming as a universal language

Over the years, Apple has launched various initiatives to help educators bring programming into classrooms for all ages, such as its Everyone Can Code program.

Cook sees programming as a universal language. "I see programming as the only universal language. It's the most important language you can learn," he said. "Of course your native language is more important for communication, but a programming language is a way to tap into your creativity."

Technology and politics

The European Union has been drafting a law to make USB-C a standard port for all smartphones, which would force Apple to include one for its iPhone.

While Cook didn't address that topic, he did comment on politics in general.

"The more barriers you put on something, the less innovative it can be," Cook said. "So you have to ask yourself if what you're asking for is really worth it. But I also think there are plenty of really smart politicians out there who understand things just fine. And the role of the electorate in a democracy is to elect people who prefer to see them as representatives."

Tim Cook visiting Europe

Cook has been touring Europe this week, vising Apple Stores, offices, and and "Ted Lasso" football field.

He ended the trip in Naples, Italy, receiving an honorary degree in Innovation and International Management by the Federico II University.

The full interview can be found on Bright's website.



34 Comments

DAalseth 6 Years · 3067 comments

I’ll agree with that. As of right now I have no use for VR, and having used a bit of AR, I don’t see why it would be essential in every day use, like the iPhone has become. Maybe there is a use case, maybe it will unfold like that, but I’m not seeing it yet. (Pun intended).

lkrupp 19 Years · 10521 comments

Science fiction novelists have written about this for decades, humanity giving up the real world for a false one. We’re already on the way with deep fake technology literally able to put words into people’s mouthes they never said and depicting them doing things they never did... and others believing it’s real. Sure, I’d love to have sex with Kate Beckinsale and think it’s real.

zimmie 9 Years · 651 comments

DAalseth said:
I’ll agree with that. As of right now I have no use for VR, and having used a bit of AR, I don’t see why it would be essential in every day use, like the iPhone has become. Maybe there is a use case, maybe it will unfold like that, but I’m not seeing it yet. (Pun intended).

Depends on what you mean by "AR". When interpreted more like "pervasive systems which improve your experience of reality" rather than as specifically visual overlays, there's a lot of use. The rhythmic thumping an Apple Watch does to indicate a left turn or right turn, for example. Adaptive transparency mode on noise-cancelling AirPods is technically mediated reality because it can subtract, but very few people use that term anymore.

Visual AR is much less interesting to me than tactile and auditory AR.

bobolicious 10 Years · 1178 comments

"I see programming as the only universal language"
I've asked if music is the most universal 'language' ?

www.youtube.com/watch?v=duSgIcEqUzQ

Is VR already immensely helpful visualizing spatial design...?

mobird 20 Years · 758 comments

Apple CEO Tim Cook

Cook spoke about augmented reality in a recent interview with Dutch news outlet Bright, saying how important it will be in the future.

"... "Imagine suddenly being able to teach with AR and demonstrate things that way. Or medically, and so on. Like I said, we are really going to look back and think about how we once lived without AR."

Cook is needing to be more specific regarding AR in these types of conversations and interviews. He seems to be very nuanced and vague as well as assuming that AR is understood and the concept is grasped and comprehended. You ask ten people what is AR and you likely will get ten different interpretations. Out in the public domain there are many interprerations, right and wrong on what AR is actually.
Maybe Apple needs to do a media campaign prior to launch explaining all that is AR to seperate the wheat from the chaff so to speak.
I imagine eveyone at Apple is leaving no stone un-turned in development of this platform, it will be eciting to watch it unfold!
IMHO