Wednesday, 7 June 2023

Apple Unveils Vision Pro AR Headset and visionOS at WWDC 2023: Everything You Need to Know

Apple Unveils Vision Pro AR Headset and visionOS at WWDC 2023

Today at its annual WWDC 2023 conference, Apple took the wraps off the Vision Pro, its long-rumored augmented reality (AR) headset. The Vision Pro is one of Apple’s most ambitious products to date — one year in the making and packed with technology that might warrant the sky-high price tag.

Vision Pro has a ski goggle-like design

The first thing you’ll notice about the Vision Pro is the chassis, which evokes a pair of high-end ski goggles. A tinted, continuous front panel wraps around the wearer’s eyes, acting as a lens and concealing a fan that draws air through the headset to cool the electronics inside.

Around the back of the Vision Pro, there’s a band that can be easily swapped out and a dial for adjusting the tightness of the headset. Zeiss worked in partnership with Apple to create magnetic lenses for prescription wearers.

Unlike some AR headsets on the market, the Vision Pro’s battery pack isn’t built into the device itself. A wire running from the rear connects to a battery pack, which provides up to two hours of use. Or Vision Pro wearers can plug into the wall for an extended experience.

One presumes that the displays suck up most of the power. The Vision Pro has two (plus an external panel), one for each eye, with 23 million pixels across both. A custom 3D lens ensures that the UI always remains within view, while features like HDR and “wide color” deliver an ostensibly superior image.

IR cameras inside of the Vision Pro track your eyes while downward-facing cameras on the exterior of the chassis track hands. A third set of lidar sensors sense objects around the Vision Pro in real-time, tracking their positions.

All of the Vision Pro’s sensors 23 in total, including a dozen cameras, five sensors, and six mics feed into the R1, a new Apple-originated chip designed to “eliminate lag” and stream images to the headset’s display “eight times faster than the blink of an eye” (as per Apple PR). 

The R1 also enables EyeSight, a feature of the Vision Pro that projects a live feed of the wearer’s eyes to the aforementioned external display. It has the effect of making the headset look transparent, at least in pre-recorded videos. Of course, the jury’s out on how well it works in practice.

visionOS

The software powering the Vision Pro is visionOS, which Apple describes as “the first OS designed for the ground up for spatial computing,” “spatial computing” being Apple’s phrase of choice for AR and virtual reality experiences. At the architecture level, visionOS shares core blocks in common with MacOS and iOS but adds a “real-time subsystem” for processing interactive visuals on the Vision Pro.

The three-dimensional interface of visionOS frees apps from the boundaries of a traditional display so that they can appear side by side at different scales. The UI responds dynamically to natural light, casting shadows to help communicate scale and distance.

Where and how to buy the Apple Vision Pro

The Vision Pro won’t be available for a while, not until “early next year,” Apple says, and won’t come cheap. Priced at $3,499, the Vision Pro is significantly more expensive than even the most pessimistic rumors suggested.

On the plus side, customers who book an appointment in an Apple Store will get a demo and a chance to personalize their fit before they buy the Vision Pro.

The post Apple Unveils Vision Pro AR Headset and visionOS at WWDC 2023: Everything You Need to Know appeared first on Asume Tech.



from Technology - Asume Tech https://asumetech.com/apple-unveils-vision-pro-ar-headset-and-visionos-at-wwdc-2023-everything-you-need-to-know/

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