Local multi-user experiences and widgets headline Apple's annual software update.
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The narrative arc of this device so far reminds me a lot of the first Newton, and I wouldn't be shocked if it was a similar path where several years from now Apple finally hits a point where the technology exists for them to offer their vision of AR/VR in a fully realized consumer product at more reasonable price points.
How does this follow? The original Newton launched at $699 in 1993 dollars ($1551.80 in 2025) and the first iPhone came out 14 years later at $599 in 2007 dollars (926.76 in 2025). Your comparison doesn't even work with the MacBook: The original Powerbook 100 would be almost 6000 dollars in 2025 money and only the most extreme versions of the MacBook Pro that the vast majority of consumers would never even consider cost that much.Apples trajectory is the same as their ongoing development of Apple Silicon, and the C1 modem, and the price point isn’t going to be anything below a MacBook Pro which has 13 cameras, LiDar, and a R1 SOC attached to it.
Apple will never admit it, but we all know the real answer is porn.With visionOS 26, Apple begins to zero-in on what the Vision Pro is actually used for
I took that to mean the original Newton vs. the Newton MessagePad 2000- I had both, the Newton showed a glimpse; the 2000 delivered as an actual usable, solid device that mostly worked as advertised.How does this follow? The original Newton launched at $699 in 1993 dollars ($1551.80 in 2025) and the first iPhone came out 14 years later at $599 in 2007 dollars (926.76 in 2025). Your comparison doesn't even work with the MacBook: The original Powerbook 100 would be almost 6000 dollars in 2025 money and only the most extreme versions of the MacBook Pro that the vast majority of consumers would never even consider cost that much.
I get you're just trying to say Apple is expensive, but history suggests that if a vision pro successor does eventually exist, it will cost less, even if its still expensive relative to other products available at that time.
I think its price is justified if you look at it as a “pro” product. With the right software, it could be useful in surgery, in architecture/construction, mechanical design, and other roles where the cost would be almost incidental. However, Apple doesn’t play really well in those sort of low volume markets, and as it stands it isn’t going to be a high volume consumer product. The only potential high(er) volume (relatively) cost insensitive market that I can picture for it now is the military, and even there they’d probably want a smaller, lighter device.Not gonna lie, I kind of thought that the "Apple Vision" product line was gonna be an abandoned footnote, like the Apple Newton. Considering that they are basically trying to "reinvent the wheel" when it comes to VR design philosophy, and stumbling over almost every basic hurdle in the process.
Good on them for keeping with it, but as it currently stands it still doesn't yet justify its purchase price, and I still have doubts it ever will.
It's so dystopic that we are at a stage where we need fake windows in our darkened, air-conditioned workpods, yet I think a fake window looking over a beautiful forest would meaningfully improve my mental health at this point.you can use a photo to make a fake window in your space
So Watching movies?Apple begins to zero-in on what the Vision Pro is actually used for...
Personally, I'd prefer a physical fake window over a virtual one if real windows are not an option. Might be a fun raspberry pi project, tbh.It's so dystopic that we are at a stage where we need fake windows in our darkened, air-conditioned workpods, yet I think a fake window looking over a beautiful forest would meaningfully improve my mental health at this point.
I mean you’re correct-my dad had a 2000 and it was way more functional. But I was mostly talking about greater commercial success, which the iPhone had but newton its technological ancestor never did.I took that to mean the original Newton vs. the Newton MessagePad 2000- I had both, the Newton showed a glimpse; the 2000 delivered as an actual usable, solid device that mostly worked as advertised.
Owning one I have to say it already is excellent for Media Playback and shutting out the world. Very niche, given the price, but watching a movie on it, being surrounded by Yosemite at night when staying in a hotel or even on a plane is incredible. I have a bunch of headsets and this is the only one where pass through mode in a well lit environment is really usable. I check my phone on it without taking off the headsetI really like the idea of Vision Pro. It just needs time to mature. It's expensive, but I'm hoping that will change in time as well.
Yup, that's the only thing it is good at, but it truly excels at it. So amazing if you travel a lot!So Watching movies?
I'm serious, because that's what I have seen form users months after the novelty wears thin. It mostly becomes a solo movie watching device.
We need beat Sabres for this deviceSo Watching movies?
I'm serious, because that's what I have seen form users months after the novelty wears thin. It mostly becomes a solo movie watching device.
Yup, that's the only thing it is good at, but it truly excels at it. So amazing if you travel a lot!
Also, widgets are now supported in visionOS. Whereas widgets can be put anywhere on your home screen on iOS, visionOS allows you to put widgets anywhere in your physical home (or office or wherever else). For example, you can put the clock widget on a wall like it's actually a wall clock, or you can use a photo to make a fake window in your space.
It's the killer (f)app“For example, the headset will soon support native playback of 3D video recorded by people other than Apple and downloaded from anywhere on the Internet”
So……. porn. Excellent.
I know porn saved many other media formats in the past, but at $3499? Nah.Apple will never admit it, but we all know the real answer is porn.
Pro tip: if you are that starved for attention, you can at least pretend like you aren't treating this forum as a write-only medium.[pages and pages of electron-wasting Jobs worship and Apple-is-dying stuff we've all seen a billion times before and therefore not worthy of commentary deleted]
(I need to go Market-craft, so setting this thread to Ignore. If anyone wants to DM, figure out for yourself first what Jobs 2.0 is teaching and I’m happy to chew the fat.)
[Folks, I know this vision won’t be welcome. Downvote away if you wish. But, like Jobs 1.0, I have now lived it, bought that shirt, learned my lumps. If you’ve done it too, you have your right to tell me I’m full of it. If you haven’t, you’re only posing.]
How long can you wear it until it becomes uncomfortable?Owning one I have to say it already is excellent for Media Playback and shutting out the world. Very niche, given the price, but watching a movie on it, being surrounded by Yosemite at night when staying in a hotel or even on a plane is incredible. I have a bunch of headsets and this is the only one where pass through mode in a well lit environment is really usable. I check my phone on it without taking off the headsetSo for the right use cases it already is much more than a prototype. Just very niche.
I doubt the external eyeball monitors cost very much. But either way, I get why they included them. It's a first-gen product where some ideas will be great, some will need tweaks, and some are superfluous.I have to wonder how much could have been shaved off of the price tag had the (let's call it what it is) useless/uncanny valley external LCD been removed.? A roughly $2000 version of this that doesn't include that eerie external LCD would be a much more palatable purchase.