I honestly doubt this will take off, but it’ll be interesting as a tech demo for what AR/VR can be at the highest end.

  • @thehatfox
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    371 year ago

    Apple is pushing productivity as the main application for Vision Pro, to the point they don’t even call it VR but spatial computing instead. I don’t think gaming is really for a focus for them at the moment, instead they want to try and tap into other markets who aren’t using VR currently.

    • @micka190
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      61 year ago

      they don’t even call it VR but spatial computing instead.

      I was under the impression these were meant to be AR glasses, not VR glasses? Either way, I’m not really sure who their target demographic is supposed to be at that price point.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        It can be both, the device isn’t transparent at all and the user can control how much of the real world they are seeing at any time. It’s all cameras that create the AR effect. Applications can be anything from a floating window in the real world or a full VR immersion.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        I wouldn’t consider it AR because it’s still a fully virtual environment the user is interacting with, granted it’s built convincingly from the camera feeds. If the lens were a clear passthrough into the real world+layering virtual elements over it then I think it falls under AR.

        It’s mostly semantics though. The line between AR and VR has been fuzzy since we started shoving camera passthrough on devices.

        • atocci
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          1 year ago

          Wow, your comment is the first time it’s been made clear to me that this thing isn’t actually see-through and that’s just a screen on the outside. I thought it was essentially a sleeker looking Hololens. I’ve had the wrong impression of this thing the entire time, and now I’m much less impressed by it.

          • @[email protected]
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            1 year ago

            Lol, yeah, and what’s crazy to me is they have the inner eye tracking cams projecting the user’s expressions back to that outer screen. Incredibly complicated implementation soaking up precious compute cycles, for no real reason or benefit. Normal Apple things. I think the outer screen goes dark if the user goes into “full VR” mode to watch a movie or whatever

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        Imagine getting written up by your supervisor because you dared to look away from your monitor take your VR headset off to give your eyes a break

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      they don’t even call it VR but spatial computing instead.

      Ugh. Apple marketing with their need to create words for existing tech is just so damned pretentious.