I've also been patiently waiting for XR to ARrive since the early 90s when I first tried on a very clunky and motion sickness-inducing headset up to modern headsets, and experiencing a steady incremental evolution of improvement. But it's been slow progress.
I've also been patiently waiting for XR to ARrive since the early 90s when I first tried on a very clunky and motion sickness-inducing headset up to modern headsets, and experiencing a steady incremental evolution of improvement. But it's been slow progress.
I’ve been reading some wonderful reviews of the new Apple VisionPro *by people who actually tried one on* and it’s very exciting. Major breakthroughs in usability and experience.
I'm probably biased, being an Apple user for over 40 years, and expected them to dramatically move the bar on XR...
I’ve been reading some wonderful reviews of the new Apple VisionPro *by people who actually tried one on* and it’s very exciting. Major breakthroughs in usability and experience.
I'm probably biased, being an Apple user for over 40 years, and expected them to dramatically move the bar on XR...
Re: Vision Pro prices, I’m reminded of Alan Kay talking about using supercomputers at Xerox Parc to build software targeting specs that would be common in a few years. Vision Pro is really for those who want to build for a later Vision mass-market device with similar specs and an accessible price.
Don't rely on a comparison of the specs, or let the huge $3,499 price cloud what Apple seems to have done ("seems," because I haven't had the opportunity to try a VisionPro yet). At some point, all the UX, tech, and polish can come together to create a transformative, evolutionary leap.
June 8, 2023 at 1:46 AM
Re: Vision Pro prices, I’m reminded of Alan Kay talking about using supercomputers at Xerox Parc to build software targeting specs that would be common in a few years. Vision Pro is really for those who want to build for a later Vision mass-market device with similar specs and an accessible price.