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Apple Vision Pro: release date, price, specs, and more

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At WWDC 2023, Apple announced its first XR headset, the Vision Pro. As expected, the hardware blows away every other VR and AR headset on the market. Unfortunately, the advanced technology packed into the svelte and stylish Vision Pro headset drives the price out of reach of most consumers.

A new standard for XR headsets

Apple

For $3,499, the Apple Reality Pro sets a new standard for AR, VR, and the all-inclusive term, XR. It allows you to place virtual screens around your Mac, take FaceTime calls without digging into your pocket, and write emails from your couch.

If tight Apple integration is all the Reality Pro provided, even early adopters might balk at the high cost. However, Apple did not disappoint, giving its XR headset truly revolutionary capabilities.

Intuitive control

Apple Vision Pro responds to subtle hand and finger gestures.
Apple

Most VR headsets require controllers, but the Vision Pro allows full access with just your hands. Apple hasn’t shared all of the details but it appears tapping and flicking your fingers, grabbing objects with your hands, and tracing with your index finger is enough to trigger actions and interact with visionOS.

Hand-tracking is well-supported by Meta’s Quest 2, Quest Pro and the upcoming Quest 3, but only in a few games and apps. Since Apple is making hands a primary input method, every app in the visionOS App Store should support hand interaction.

For authentication, the Vision Pro performs a retina scan to verify your identity quickly and effortlessly.

Apple Vision Pro performs a retina scan for authentication.
Apple

For gaming, you need more than hands. Thankfully, Apple realizes this and game controllers can be used for quick and responsive control.

Your private theater

Apple Vision Pro showing an immersive theater view.
Apple

Apple claims its headset provides a view that’s equivalent to a 100-foot wide screen. With the included Spatial Audio, this give you a private theater for movies, TV shows, sporting events, and more. Of course, Apple TV+ will be available on the Vision Pro.

The image quality of Apple’s Vision Pro is also notably better than competitors, featuring 4K resolution for each eye packing a total of  23 million pixels into the two displays, more than double that of Meta’s best VR headset and even eclipsing the Varjo Aero’s impressive 2880-by-2720 pixel per eye resolution.

Apple didn’t share details about the display brightness or colorspace, but did mention brilliant color, spectacular detail, and high dynamic range. The presentation showed someone using the professional image editor Adobe Lightroom in Vision Pro.

The implication is that photographers, videographers, and graphic designers will be able use the Vision Pro instead of a monitor and still have confidence that picture quality will be good on traditional flat screens. The color fidelity is unconfirmed, for now.

Vision Pro apps

Apple Vision Pro blends 3D models, 2D screens, and reality seamlessly.
Apple

Apple’s Vision Pro has a home screen with apps, just like your iPhone. You can see the time and date, check the weather, and check notifications just as you can on any other Apple product.

Apple also brought many of its core apps to the Vision Pro, making it easy for its iPhone, iPad, and Mac customers to put on the headset and see familiar icons and themes. Transitioning to an entirely new way of interacting with a device isn’t easy, so this soft landing is important.

However, as an entirely new product category for Apple, the Vision Pro won’t have as rich a library of native third-party apps as a Mac or an iPhone.

Meta’s Quest 2 and Pro headsets enjoy a vast library of games, and the platform has been around since 2019, picking up where the Oculus Rift left off, dating back to 2012.

This is where iPad apps come in.

iPad Apps

Apple Vision Pro home screen shows floating apps.
Apple

Apple has had key developers working on Vision Pro apps in advance of its announcement, but it will take years to develop new games and port existing content to the new platform. In the meantime, Apple is filling that gap with iPad apps, presumably including the recently released Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro.

The Apple Vision Pro will be able to run iPad apps, expanding its capabilities before immersive apps become available. Since the headset is powered by a high-performance M2 chip, it’s just as fast as an iPad Pro. The same chip powers the new 15″ MacBook Air and other Macs.

When you put on an Apple Vision Pro, you can pick up where you left off with your iPhone, iPad, or Mac, multitasking with multiple apps side-by-side, or scale one app up for more focus.

Mixed reality

Apple Vision Pro has a digital crown just like the Apple Watch.
Apple

Unlike the passthrough of the Meta Quest Pro and other VR headsets that have noticeable visual flaws, Apple’s mixed reality view of your actual surroundings seems nearly indistinguishable from what you’d see with the headset off. That’s thanks to higher-quality cameras and more processing power to align the generated images quickly and with great precision.

The Vision Pro’s digital crown, which looks like the one on the Apple Watch, allows for an easy transition between immersive view and seeing your room. When someone approaches you, the display will reveal them and they can see you also. More about that later.

Based on Apple’s Vision Pro demonstration, graphics processing has great enough performance to render objects that appear nearly as substantial as the physical desk or table you’re sitting at. This is the mixed reality we’ve all been waiting for. If only it didn’t cost more than a MacBook Pro.

Gaming

A man plays NBA 2K23 with a DualSense controller.
Apple

Apple’s Vision Pro uses Apple Metal 3 technology on an M2 chip providing great performance for games. The challenge, of course, is getting enough content on the platform to compete with existing VR headsets with libraries built over several years.

Apple Arcade will provide over 100 apps at launch, drawing from the iPad library, but that won’t be enough to inspire gamers to buy Apple’s powerful, but gaming-constrained device.

Apple announced an intriguing partnership with Disney, but it is going to take time to meet demand for gaming that takes advantage of the Vision Pro’s immersive capabilities, super-high resolution, and special features.

Eyes front and center

The Apple Vision Pro reveals the wearer's eyes on a front-facing display.
Apple

In what is certain to be the most controversial aspect of the Vision Pro headset, Apple placed a display on the outside of the headset so your eyes are still visible even when wearing the device. The view is a bit dark, but looks convincing.

We’ve previously seen Meta prototypes with a similar design called reverse passthrough. Apple’s implementation is much better, as if you’re wearing ski goggles.

Hardware

Apple Vision Pro components are shown in an exploded view.
Apple

Apple packed the Vision Pro headset with cutting edge technology. It’s clear that this had to be an expensive device. Earlier rumors suggest that the iPhone company realized this wasn’t a device for everyone. It’s meant for early adopters, developers, and corporations that can afford the cost given the potential it opens up.

With an M2 and a new R1 processor onboard, this will be a high-performance device with as much computing power as a MacBook Air. In the VR world, you’d need to connect to a PC with a powerful discrete GPU to match this speed.

Apple Vision Pro shown connected to its external battery pack.
Apple

Apple didn’t delve into the battery life in its presentation, but quietly admitted that it’s only about 2 hours. An external battery pack is used so a cable connection is required to use the headset.

While most of us look on in envy, rest assured a lower cost Apple XR headset is already in development to bring Apple’s plan for an augmented reality future forward.

Price and availability

Apple announced the Vision Pro today, starting at the eye-watering price of $3,499. The powerful, new XR headset will be available early next year.

We’ll be closely watching new developments, so stay tuned for full specifications, additional app details, and much more.

Editors’ Recommendations







At WWDC 2023, Apple announced its first XR headset, the Vision Pro. As expected, the hardware blows away every other VR and AR headset on the market. Unfortunately, the advanced technology packed into the svelte and stylish Vision Pro headset drives the price out of reach of most consumers.

A new standard for XR headsets

Apple Vision Pro provides virtual screens for your Mac.
Apple

For $3,499, the Apple Reality Pro sets a new standard for AR, VR, and the all-inclusive term, XR. It allows you to place virtual screens around your Mac, take FaceTime calls without digging into your pocket, and write emails from your couch.

If tight Apple integration is all the Reality Pro provided, even early adopters might balk at the high cost. However, Apple did not disappoint, giving its XR headset truly revolutionary capabilities.

Intuitive control

Apple Vision Pro responds to subtle hand and finger gestures.
Apple

Most VR headsets require controllers, but the Vision Pro allows full access with just your hands. Apple hasn’t shared all of the details but it appears tapping and flicking your fingers, grabbing objects with your hands, and tracing with your index finger is enough to trigger actions and interact with visionOS.

Hand-tracking is well-supported by Meta’s Quest 2, Quest Pro and the upcoming Quest 3, but only in a few games and apps. Since Apple is making hands a primary input method, every app in the visionOS App Store should support hand interaction.

For authentication, the Vision Pro performs a retina scan to verify your identity quickly and effortlessly.

Apple Vision Pro performs a retina scan for authentication.
Apple

For gaming, you need more than hands. Thankfully, Apple realizes this and game controllers can be used for quick and responsive control.

Your private theater

Apple Vision Pro showing an immersive theater view.
Apple

Apple claims its headset provides a view that’s equivalent to a 100-foot wide screen. With the included Spatial Audio, this give you a private theater for movies, TV shows, sporting events, and more. Of course, Apple TV+ will be available on the Vision Pro.

The image quality of Apple’s Vision Pro is also notably better than competitors, featuring 4K resolution for each eye packing a total of  23 million pixels into the two displays, more than double that of Meta’s best VR headset and even eclipsing the Varjo Aero’s impressive 2880-by-2720 pixel per eye resolution.

Apple didn’t share details about the display brightness or colorspace, but did mention brilliant color, spectacular detail, and high dynamic range. The presentation showed someone using the professional image editor Adobe Lightroom in Vision Pro.

The implication is that photographers, videographers, and graphic designers will be able use the Vision Pro instead of a monitor and still have confidence that picture quality will be good on traditional flat screens. The color fidelity is unconfirmed, for now.

Vision Pro apps

Apple Vision Pro blends 3D models, 2D screens, and reality seamlessly.
Apple

Apple’s Vision Pro has a home screen with apps, just like your iPhone. You can see the time and date, check the weather, and check notifications just as you can on any other Apple product.

Apple also brought many of its core apps to the Vision Pro, making it easy for its iPhone, iPad, and Mac customers to put on the headset and see familiar icons and themes. Transitioning to an entirely new way of interacting with a device isn’t easy, so this soft landing is important.

However, as an entirely new product category for Apple, the Vision Pro won’t have as rich a library of native third-party apps as a Mac or an iPhone.

Meta’s Quest 2 and Pro headsets enjoy a vast library of games, and the platform has been around since 2019, picking up where the Oculus Rift left off, dating back to 2012.

This is where iPad apps come in.

iPad Apps

Apple Vision Pro home screen shows floating apps.
Apple

Apple has had key developers working on Vision Pro apps in advance of its announcement, but it will take years to develop new games and port existing content to the new platform. In the meantime, Apple is filling that gap with iPad apps, presumably including the recently released Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro.

The Apple Vision Pro will be able to run iPad apps, expanding its capabilities before immersive apps become available. Since the headset is powered by a high-performance M2 chip, it’s just as fast as an iPad Pro. The same chip powers the new 15″ MacBook Air and other Macs.

When you put on an Apple Vision Pro, you can pick up where you left off with your iPhone, iPad, or Mac, multitasking with multiple apps side-by-side, or scale one app up for more focus.

Mixed reality

Apple Vision Pro has a digital crown just like the Apple Watch.
Apple

Unlike the passthrough of the Meta Quest Pro and other VR headsets that have noticeable visual flaws, Apple’s mixed reality view of your actual surroundings seems nearly indistinguishable from what you’d see with the headset off. That’s thanks to higher-quality cameras and more processing power to align the generated images quickly and with great precision.

The Vision Pro’s digital crown, which looks like the one on the Apple Watch, allows for an easy transition between immersive view and seeing your room. When someone approaches you, the display will reveal them and they can see you also. More about that later.

Based on Apple’s Vision Pro demonstration, graphics processing has great enough performance to render objects that appear nearly as substantial as the physical desk or table you’re sitting at. This is the mixed reality we’ve all been waiting for. If only it didn’t cost more than a MacBook Pro.

Gaming

A man plays NBA 2K23 with a DualSense controller.
Apple

Apple’s Vision Pro uses Apple Metal 3 technology on an M2 chip providing great performance for games. The challenge, of course, is getting enough content on the platform to compete with existing VR headsets with libraries built over several years.

Apple Arcade will provide over 100 apps at launch, drawing from the iPad library, but that won’t be enough to inspire gamers to buy Apple’s powerful, but gaming-constrained device.

Apple announced an intriguing partnership with Disney, but it is going to take time to meet demand for gaming that takes advantage of the Vision Pro’s immersive capabilities, super-high resolution, and special features.

Eyes front and center

The Apple Vision Pro reveals the wearer's eyes on a front-facing display.
Apple

In what is certain to be the most controversial aspect of the Vision Pro headset, Apple placed a display on the outside of the headset so your eyes are still visible even when wearing the device. The view is a bit dark, but looks convincing.

We’ve previously seen Meta prototypes with a similar design called reverse passthrough. Apple’s implementation is much better, as if you’re wearing ski goggles.

Hardware

Apple Vision Pro components are shown in an exploded view.
Apple

Apple packed the Vision Pro headset with cutting edge technology. It’s clear that this had to be an expensive device. Earlier rumors suggest that the iPhone company realized this wasn’t a device for everyone. It’s meant for early adopters, developers, and corporations that can afford the cost given the potential it opens up.

With an M2 and a new R1 processor onboard, this will be a high-performance device with as much computing power as a MacBook Air. In the VR world, you’d need to connect to a PC with a powerful discrete GPU to match this speed.

Apple Vision Pro shown connected to its external battery pack.
Apple

Apple didn’t delve into the battery life in its presentation, but quietly admitted that it’s only about 2 hours. An external battery pack is used so a cable connection is required to use the headset.

While most of us look on in envy, rest assured a lower cost Apple XR headset is already in development to bring Apple’s plan for an augmented reality future forward.

Price and availability

Apple announced the Vision Pro today, starting at the eye-watering price of $3,499. The powerful, new XR headset will be available early next year.

We’ll be closely watching new developments, so stay tuned for full specifications, additional app details, and much more.

Editors’ Recommendations






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