James Cameron says vanity fairNick Bilton said his experience with Apple's Vision Pro was “religious. I was skeptical at first. I don't bow down before the great Apple god, but I was really, really blown away.” … I don't think that's evolutionary.'' This is revolutionary. I'm speaking as someone who has been working in VR for his 18 years. ”
He explained that the reason it looks so real is because Apple Vision Pro is writing a 4K image into my eyes. “This is equivalent to the resolution of each eyeball on a 75-inch TV: 23 million pixels.” To put this into perspective, his average 4K TV has about 8 million pixels. . Apple engineers didn't just cut out a rectangle from the corner of the 4K display that he put in the Apple Vision Pro. They somehow compressed twice his pixels into a space as small as an eyeball. For people like Prime Minister David Cameron, who has worked in this field for 20 years, this is a “fix-all”.
But despite this wonder, its 23 million pixels are so crisp and sharp that you can't tell reality from a digital composite…The more I've used Apple Vision Pro over the past two weeks, the more I've noticed that An obvious problem became apparent to me. Whether it's weight (which does matter, but decreases over time) or size (which decreases with each iteration), it causes us to consume more content alone. There's no need to worry about being alone (nearly half of Americans already watch TV alone). Or how big tech companies like Meta, Netflix, Spotify, and Google are currently holding off on bringing their apps to devices. (Once consumers are there, content creators may come back and have already adopted the device, like Disney, which has released 150 movies in 3D, including huge franchises like Star Wars and Marvel.) (Some places make it available for viewing.) And it's not even the price. Because if Apple wanted, it could subsidize the cost of his Apple Vision Pro, which would have the same financial impact as Mr. Cook losing his dime between the couch cushions. Because it becomes.
What I'm talking about is not finding a solution… I can see the day coming when all of us can't imagine life without augmented reality. As we become more and more enveloped in technology, we'll crave these glasses like a drug, the same way we crave iPhones today, but with the dopamine hit that this AR resolution brings. The desire for it increases even more. Deep down I know Apple Vision Pro is too immersive, but all I want to do is see the world through it. “I'm convinced this technology is great. I still think it will fail, and I still hope it fails,” one Silicon Valley investor told me. “Apple feels increasingly like a tech fentanyl dealer masquerading as a rehab provider.” Harsh words, but he feels what we all feel, slaves to our smartphones, and this drama. I've seen it before, I know what the first act is like, I know what the second act is like, I know how it ends.
- Political blogger Tegan Goddard said Vision Pro “gives us a glimpse into how computers will be used in the future. If you're a skeptic, and many people are, try it before you draw conclusions.” “You need to see it. It's hard to explain.” “I put it on. But I swear it's shocking.”
- Apple CEO Tim Cook told Bilton he watched the third season: “You can actually lie down on the couch if you want, or you can put the display up on the ceiling.” ted lasso I saw it reflected on the ceiling and it was incredible! ”
- “In a few years, they'll look like sunglasses and cost less than $1,500,” Dan Ives, a senior analyst at investment firm Wedbush Securities, told Bilton.