Microsoft's big data solves golf's mysteries in the Arccos Caddie app

The world didn't need another golf app, but maybe golf apps plus big data changes that.

If the Arccos Caddie app can solve the mystery of the golf swing with big data, perhaps big data can solve other world problems, too. That's why Microsoft featured this app at Build 2017, to show off the data-crunching powers of its Azure cloud service. 

According to Arccos, the Caddie app sources a wealth of data. It already knows how far you can hit a ball with each club, based on your history. It then correlates that information with more than 386 million geotagged points across 40,000 courses, plus weather info, to present a strategy—lay up or go for it, say—as well as the projected odds that you’ll hit the green. You can even adjust the tee box and pin location to provide a more accurate prediction. (The company’s YouTube video has more.) 

Caddie uses an existing family of Arccos 360 hardware sensors that players attach to their clubs. In fact, you’ll need to have played five rounds within the Arccos 360 framework for it to learn how you’ll respond in a given situation, and provide an accurate prediction. It isn’t cheap: The Arccos 360 system costs $250, and the Caddie app (for Android and iOS) will only be available as part of a subscription. (The price for the subscription hasn’t been released.) The idea though, is that the Caddie delivers “actionable insights” in real time about what to do on the course. 

approach zoom Arccos

The Caddie app can even predict the odds of which quadrant of the green your approach shot will end up in.

At its Build developer conference, Microsoft is expected to talk about the “intelligent cloud,” the next phase in the evolution of its “mobile first, cloud first” strategy. An intelligent cloud collects data from devices at the “edge” of the network—your smarthphone, for example—to sift for an answer. Microsoft’s Azure cloud is the Arccos partner, and the company has already stored 61 million shots in its database to confirm it’s making the correct analysis.

Why this matters: Sure, this costs a fortune, if you buy all the sensors and subscribe to the service. But there’s a real wealth of data at work here. If this technology works as advertised—seriously, watch the YouTube video—this could be the app to have at the country club. The only thing it can’t do is carry your clubs.

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Mark Hachman

Mark Hachman

PC World (US online)
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