Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.

MacRumors

macrumors bot
Original poster
Apr 12, 2001
70,794
42,752


Apple's original Vision Pro spatial computing headset launched two years ago today.

Apple-Vision-Pro-Turns-One-Feature.jpg

Apple's work on a head-mounted device was the subject of rumors for many years before the Vision Pro's announcement. By the early 2020s, those reports had converged around the idea that Apple was preparing a high-end mixed-reality headset positioned as a new form of general-purpose computer.

Apple finally revealed the Apple Vision Pro in June 2023 during its annual Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC), marking the company's first major new hardware platform announcement since the Apple Watch. In its initial announcement, Apple described Vision Pro as its first "spatial computer," introducing visionOS, a new operating system designed around three-dimensional app windows controlled by eye tracking, hand gestures, and voice input. The device combined dual micro-OLED displays with a total of roughly 23 million pixels, advanced sensor arrays, and custom silicon, including the M2 chip and a dedicated R1 chip for real-time sensor processing. Apple also announced a starting price of $3,499 in the United States and said the product would launch in early 2024.

The Vision Pro launched in the United States on February 2, 2024. Initial reviews broadly praised the visual quality, eye- and hand-tracking accuracy, and technical ambition of the product, while also noting its high price, physical weight, limited battery life, and a comparatively small library of software designed specifically for spatial computing. Following the launch, Apple gradually expanded Vision Pro availability to additional countries and continued to update visionOS with new features in 2024 and 2025.

The headset was never expected to be mass-market from day one, according to Apple. Even so, enthusiasm reportedly cooled far faster than anticipated. The latest report on the matter was published earlier this month by the Financial Times, claiming that the Vision Pro is still failing to catch on.

Roughly a year and a half after the initial release, Apple introduced an updated Vision Pro model featuring the M5 chip, representing the first hardware revision of the device. The M5 chip enabled 10% more rendered pixels, a refresh rate of up to 120Hz, better responsiveness, and up to an extra hour of battery life. Apple also introduced a counterweighted Dual Knit Band designed to improve comfort.

Reports suggest that there are now no Apple Vision headsets in active development, with the company's focus pivoting decisively to smart glasses. Soon after launch, Apple was believed to have shifted focus to a lower-cost "Vision Air," designed to bring spatial computing to a wider audience through a lighter and cheaper headset, while also planning a redesigned Vision Pro 2 for later in the decade.

By mid-2024, that plan appeared to change and the company's once-ambitious multi-year roadmap for the Vision Pro is said to have unraveled. A report from The Information said Apple had suspended development of the redesigned Vision Pro, redirecting resources toward the cheaper model, which itself later slipped amid cost and design challenges.

Supply-chain reports suggested Apple was winding down production of the first-generation Vision Pro due to weak demand and excess inventory, with the company pivoting to a chip refresh to use up stockpiled components. A year later, Bloomberg reported that Apple also paused work on the lower-cost headset, shifting its focus toward smart glasses, potentially leaving no next-generation headset hardware in active development.

Article Link: Apple Vision Pro Launched Two Years Ago Today
 
  • Sad
Reactions: System603
It will most probably function as a dev machine for whatever glasses come out next year. Hard to imagine that the glasses will run something other than a light version of VisionOS.
 
I remember hearing from every techbro on twitter that this was the beginning of the end of the iPhone
Never trust a tech influencer when they claim to actually use the products they advertise outside of their contractual obligations. They’ll tell you they have a new 'daily driver,' but it only lasts for three days, right until their next partnership kicks in and the next video goes up.
 
Reduce the cost, get rid of the stupid external battery pack and extra junk like that additional screen, and I’ll buy one as a home theatre screen. Also 8K per eye 120hz.

The experience there is meant to be out of this world, and genuinely an experience you can’t get elsewhere
 
Got one this past Christmas and easily the most disappointing Apple product I’ve ever experienced.

It’s truly fascinating how Apple missed the mark so badly with the Vision Pro - after only using it a single time it was clear that this product was not the future in computing…

Nearly everything feels gimmicky, clunky, or cumbersome.

Apple should have cancelled this product like they did the Apple Car, Apple TV (actual physical TV hardware), AirPower… and put all of their resources into a product that so clearly is the future… AR/VR glasses.

Also, should add - no surprise but returned mine and don’t miss it one bit.
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.