Technology

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Apple CEO Tim Cook looks on during an Apple event at their headquarters in Cupertino, California, September 7, 2022.
Carlos Barria | Reuters

Apple’s headset project suffered from CEO Tim Cook’s “distant” approach and lacked the confidence of key company executives at times, Bloomberg reported Thursday.

The augmented reality headset has been in the works for years but has reportedly been hampered by Cook’s “relative noninvolvement,” Bloomberg reported citing people familiar with the project, with the project costing over $1 billion annually and having changed direction significantly since work began.

Cook’s relatively hands-off approach to a marquee project stands in stark contrast to his predecessor, Apple’s late founder Steve Jobs. Jobs was known for his obsessive focus on even the smallest details of a project, and worked closely with his top design executive, Jony Ive.

Cook’s approach is quite different. “He’s the complete opposite of Steve in terms of having strong opinions on the minutiae,” a person familiar told Bloomberg. Cook isn’t alone in keeping his distance, Bloomberg reported.

Top executives including Apple software chief Craig Federighi and hardware executive Johny Srouji have both shown concern about the project, Bloomberg reported. Federighi seemed “wary” and kept his distance, Bloomberg reported citing people familiar, and Srouji compared the headset effort to a “science project.”

But executive concerns may not weigh as heavily on the project’s success as much as consumer response might. Apple made the decision to sell the headset product at cost as opposed to at a loss, as it originally planned to do, Bloomberg reported.

The company has reportedly revised sale estimates down from 3 million a year to 900,000 annually. Those shifting sales estimates have come as the company has revised the headset’s form factor and utility.

Bloomberg reported that Ive, who departed from Apple in 2019 but remained involved in headset development until “about a year ago,” clashed with the executive tasked with exploring “head-worn devices,” Mike Rockwell.

Ive was reportedly pushing for a “maximally portable device,” close to how Cook envisioned the device. Rockwell’s team initially wanted a device that would rely on a Mac-mini-sized base station, an approach that other augmented- and virtual-reality manufacturers have shied away from.

Stand-alone glasses are now at least four years away after Apple decided to postpone any major product development in that arena, Bloomberg reported citing people familiar.

One open question, and potentially the most significant concern, is how consumers will use it. Meta’s Oculus has struggled with some obstacles to adoption despite the company’s onetime bet-the-house approach to virtual reality; Magic Leap, another augmented-reality firm, has pared back its vision significantly.

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