- cross-posted to:
- technology@beehaw.org
- cross-posted to:
- technology@beehaw.org
Early impressions sound like Apple may have actually pulled this off. Here’s what The Verge had to say:
Was all this made better by the wildly superior Vision Pro hardware? Without question. But was it made more compelling? I don’t know, and I’m not sure I can know with just a short time wearing the headset. I do know that wearing this thing felt oddly lonely. How do you watch a movie with other people in a Vision Pro? What if you want to collaborate with people in the room with you and people on FaceTime? What does it mean that Apple wants you to wear a headset at your child’s birthday party? There are just more questions than answers here, and some of those questions get at the very nature of what it means for our lives to be literally mediated by screens.
I definitely agree with that. I’d like to try this but I don’t know if I’d ever want one.
Yea. The thing is clearly still at prototyping stages, and they’re probably paying close attention to what developers want to and can do with it.
I think they’ll remember their iphone experience where it took a few models for it to really get going, so I wouldn’t be surprised to see them persevere (thus, no doubt, the price).
After having sat with it for a while, I feel like I can see where they’re coming from. They’re going for the best most intuitive UI between the user and the “spatial computer”. I think they’re banking on that experience being novel, good and compelling or even addictive enough that people will want to use it. We shall see I guess.
The photos thing isn’t their killer app for it and I think they know that. It wouldn’t have been hard to implement I suspect, as it’s essentially just recording the pass-through video. It’s the gestures, pass-through, eye-tracking, video quality and the spatial OS that they’ve worked on. And I wouldn’t be surprised now if there’s something there. Not for everyone, and definitely not all the time, but maybe something. Or it’ll be an awful flop.
Yeah I think something like this will eventually be pretty mainstream. AR seems like the future in a lot of ways. This is just an early step.