Apple Vision Pro: Passthrough video
Apple Vision Pro passthrough is better than other headsets I have tried, but it still has visible limits: haze, blur, smudging, and motion blur remind you this is not yet true everyday AR.
Apple Vision Pro passthrough is better than other headsets I have tried, but it still has visible limits: haze, blur, smudging, and motion blur remind you this is not yet true everyday AR.
Apple Vision Pro passthrough can look blurry, hazy, or soft at certain distances and lighting levels. In most cases, that does not mean the headset is broken.
A practical first look at Apple Vision Pro, including what comes in the box, early setup steps, battery observations, fit issues, Optic ID setup, and first impressions of eye and hand control.
Thomas is planning a live unboxing on February 2 once his preorder arrives. The stream time may move earlier depending on delivery, with a short countdown before going live.
Apple Vision Pro and Meta headsets seem aimed at different habits: Apple is focused on productivity, while Meta is built more around social experiences. That difference may shape which one people use more often.
A practical look at why larger virtual workspaces, FaceTime, and multitasking may be the real everyday value of spatial computing, beyond movies and games.
Apple reduced headset weight by moving the battery off the headset and onto an external cable pack. The tradeoff is battery life: about two hours for general use and two and a half hours for 2D video.
Apple Vision Pro is not something everyone needs to buy right now, but it points toward an interesting future: a world where screens can appear wherever you need them instead of being fixed to TVs, monitors, and desks.
A practical look at why this headset is better understood as an AR headset, not full VR, and why its $3,500 price matters.
Apple is framing its first headset around spatial computing, blending AR and VR so digital content can sit alongside the physical world instead of feeling locked inside a screen.
3D printed organs and guided headsets could give surgeons a more realistic way to practice cuts, sutures, and procedures before working on a real patient.
Apple Vision Pro is easy to compare with VR gaming headsets, but I think Apple is aiming at something different: augmented reality as a practical computing platform.