Instant Alert: Apple matches Microsoft's NFL deal by giving Major League Baseball coaches iPads

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Apple matches Microsoft's NFL deal by giving Major League Baseball coaches iPads

by Kif Leswing on Mar 30, 2016, 9:18 AM

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Baseball fans will spot coaches and managers using Apple iPads in the dugout this season.

Apple and Major League Baseball signed a multi-year deal to make iPad Pros available to teams that want to use them to use data and visualizations to make in-game tweaks, The Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday. 

The financial terms of the deal were not immediately available. 

MLB isn't the first American sports league to embrace tablets for in-game use.

Microsoft has a five-year, $400 million agreement with the National Football League to put Surface tablets on the sidelines for players and coaches to use, although there have been issues with very public glitches and broadcasters referring to the Windows computers as "iPads."

“We’re not just replacing binders with tablets, we’re actually helping them do things that weren’t possible before,” Apple marketing head Phil Schiller told the Journal, alluding to Microsoft's football tablet implementation. 

The tablets that MLB uses will be optional for each team, and they won't draw from a central repository of baseball data — instead, the custom MLB Dugout app will be updated with team-specific data before each game. Coaches will be able to evaluate how a hitter will fare against a given pitcher, which can be valuable when making lineup decisions. Players will be able to watch video clips from previous games to scout their opponents. 

The 12.9-inch iPads will be equipped with rugged, MLB-branded cases.

MLB is a surprisingly technically competent league for the caretaker of America's centuries-old pastime. In recent years, baseball has expanded its instant replay system, and the league's associated technology wing. MLB Advanced Media, which developed the MLB Dugout app, has also developed some of the most advanced video streaming technology available, and it powers services like HBO Now. 

SEE ALSO: It is time for Major League Baseball umpires to stop calling balls and strikes


 
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