"The device, called Vision Pro and shaped like a pair of ski
goggles, faces a skeptical consumer market and competition from others, like
fellow tech giant Meta.
Apple lived up to months of expectations on Monday when it
introduced new high-tech goggles that blend the real world with virtual
reality. The $3,500 device, called the Vision Pro, will offer “augmented
reality” and introduce “spatial computing,” Apple said.
But conspicuously absent from the company’s carefully
choreographed announcement were the words “virtual reality,” underscoring the
challenges the tech giant is likely to face in marketing the device to a mass
audience.
Interest in virtual reality picked up briefly after the idea
of the metaverse — an immersive online world popularized by science fiction —
was introduced to mainstream audiences during the pandemic. But the concept
lost steam as people returned to their prepandemic lives, investors pivoted to
artificial intelligence and it became clear how much technological innovation
would be required to achieve such a futuristic vision.
Past virtual reality offerings, including Google Glass,
Magic Leap, Microsoft’s HoloLens and Meta’s Quest Pro, have been either
commercial failures or only modest successes. And companies have so far failed
to demonstrate what is indispensable about virtual reality.
Analysts do not anticipate the Vision Pro, which will be
available early next year, to have significant mainstream appeal — at least at
first. The $3,500 price could dissuade many consumers.
Carolina Milanesi, a consumer tech analyst for the research
firm Creative Strategies, said she did not think the headset “is going to be
for mass-market consumers.” Instead, she said, “it will be for early adopters —
where Apple most often starts — and developers.”
If the device lacks broad appeal, it could still be a useful
trial run for Apple, which could eventually create a virtual reality product
aimed at a wider group of consumers, like a lightweight pair of glasses.
“I don’t think Apple has super-huge expectations,” said Jeff
Fieldhack, a research director at Counterpoint Research. “They know this is an
evolution that’s going to take some time.”
Apple could also vault to the forefront of the XR market — a
term for extended reality, similar to virtual reality, Mr. Fieldhack said.
“I’m sure it will be seen as the best, best in class,” he
said. “This is going to be extraordinary improvements in the display quality,
resolution, refresh rates, probably the lightness, feel — all the things that
are the hiccups of XR to date, a lot of them are going to be addressed.”
The likely challenges that the Vision Pro will face on the
market did not squelch the enthusiasm of thousands of attendees of Apple’s
annual Worldwide Developers Conference Monday. At the company’s
spaceship-shaped headquarters in Cupertino, Calif., they cheered and whooped as
Apple executives discussed the device’s features.
In a mostly prerecorded presentation that lasted more than
two hours and touched on an array of other products, Apple repeatedly said
using the new VR goggles felt like “magic.”
“There are certain products that shift the way we look at
technology and the role it plays in our lives,” said Tim Cook, Apple’s chief
executive. “We believe Apple Vision Pro is a revolutionary product.”
The headset, which looks like a pair of ski goggles, will
have a three-dimensional interface in which users can view their surroundings
and virtual reality at the same time, or toggle between the two to emphasize
one mode or block it out entirely. It will feature the same kinds of
applications, like FaceTime and Safari, as other Apple devices, with screens
hovering in the air in front of users’ faces and growing larger or smaller at
will. A wire attached to the headset plugs into a battery pack, providing two
hours of battery life.
The company said people could unlock the device by scanning
their eyes. Customers will use their eyes, voice and fingers to move displays
and open apps, without any additional hardware. Apple said the Vision Pro would
be a useful tool for work and entertainment, with a powerful sound and visual
system akin to a personalized movie theater.
Some have speculated that the Vision Pro could build off
Apple’s growing content portfolio and feature exclusive content, like movies,
games or television shows. In a brief appearance, Robert A. Iger, the chief
executive of Disney, did not promise anything other than making Disney+ available
on the Vision Pro when it launches.
Apple also announced a series of other updates and new
products, like a 15-inch MacBook Air laptop and improved computer chips for its
desktop computers. The company introduced updated operating systems for its
computers, AirPods, watches and iPhones, with features like a Journal app,
FaceTime video messages and a standby mode with a larger clock on a phone’s
home screen.
Largely absent from the event were mentions of artificial
intelligence. Apple debuted improvements to its Siri voice command system —
like the ability for it to recognize family pets in clusters of photos — as
well as a better autocorrect texting function and live transcriptions of voice
mail.
But unlike other big tech companies, Apple avoided an in-depth
discussion of what A.I. will mean to the company."
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