On the day of the launch of the Vision Pro headset, Apple CEO Tim Cook spoke with ABC reporters in New York. He talked about the vision of the future of such devices.
“I think that his [Apple Vision Pro] will use many different ways because it is a spatial computer. You know, the iPhone introduced us to mobile computing. Mac introduced us to personal computers. This is the first spatial computer,” Cook said.
“The company has several of these. Most companies do not have them. We’ve had the Mac, the iPod, the iPad, the iPhone, the Apple Watch, and now the Vision Pro. This is one of those moments”
“People will interact with it in different ways. Some will join her via FaceTime. Others will train with her. Surgeons will train for it. The number of use cases is similar to a computer. It’s just colossal. There are already more than 1 million applications for this.”
As for whether Vision Pro could lead to further poisoning of people from each other, Cook said her ability to “augment your reality” exists to counteract that. As for the Vision Pro’s $3,500 price tag, Cook emphasized that it’s “tomorrow’s technology today.”
“These are tomorrow’s technologies today, so I think about it. We have 5000 product patents. So we really relied on that. And I hope that someone will pay for it every month, someone will just buy it. I’ve talked to a lot of people online, they’re just going to buy it. But later it is not known what will happen. But we believe that today we evaluated her correctly.”
It should be noted that the Apple Vision Pro is not the first popular augmented or virtual reality headset on the market. Just as the Mac was not the first PC, and the iPhone was not the first portable computer.
Early Reviews The Apple Vision Pro is a great headset with a number of compromises
Source: 9to5Mac