Currently, I am overlooking a lake at Mount Hood while writing this. I hear birds in the distance and see the lake calm, with subtle waves and some mist in the distance. Yet, it is fake, as I am sitting on our top floor, a barely furnished room full of items belonging to a family house with two young kids. I am using Apple’s Vision Pro to explore what Spatial Computing can be. I am in awe; let me explain in this blog post.
Apple Vision Pro
Imagine a set of great earphones for listening to music, offering you private access to high-quality audio playback. The Apple Vision Pro is like that, but for your eyes instead of your ears. You put it on like a set of goggles, and inside, you see a digital world blending with your reality. You can choose to let the real outer world in or filter it out, much like how active noise cancelling works for audio.
Using some very advanced chips, sensors, and cameras, the Apple Vision Pro headset is capable of projecting virtual objects into your real world, positioning them in a fixed place where they stay as long as you want them there. You can do things like watching a movie on a gigantic cinema display or immersing yourself in your family’s photos. Or, you can use the Vision Pro for work, as I do, using a window where I type my text, right at the lakeside of Mount Hood.
Other websites and blogs have posted some very in-depth discussions on Apple Vision Pro, discussing the hardware, its advantages, and disadvantages. I recommend you check those out as I do not want to repeat what others have written or said. Some reviews worth your time:
Casey Neistat – The thing no one will say about Apple Vision ProNilay Patel – Apple Vision Pro review: magic, until it’s notOm Malik – My 4 magic moments with Vision Pro
Spatial Computing
More than this particular first generation of hardware, I am interested in what Apple is showing the world with its VisionOS software. It’s not just a fancy wearable projector; it’s interactive! Cameras on the inside track your iris position, i.e., where you’re exactly looking. This information is used to enable interaction with the digital world by just looking at things. A subtle tap with your fingers is registered by another set of cameras, all seamlessly integrating an experience that enables you to “look and tap” like you would otherwise do with “point and click” or “touch and swipe”.
This fundamental interaction model is very well executed; after a few minutes, it feels totally natural, and I have since been wondering why my iPhone or iPad does not respond in the same manner. It’s classic Apple magic as all the heavy lifting is done without giving me much (if any) friction. It just works.
To get some work done, I have connected a standard bluetooth keyboard and trackpad to the Vision Pro, leveraging my ability to touch type; it all feels very natural. The Vision Pro does not require a computer; it is the computer! It features quite capable Apple Silicon chips, and plenty of onboard storage (mine has 1 TB).
If you have been reading my blog, you know I have a thing for tablets as they are portable yet very capable. The Vision Pro might be another step forward: it is very portable, yet it offers an entire virtual world for your eyes! It’s like being able to carry a massive multi-monitor setup with me; it’s bonkers!
Mixing the digital and real world is very accessible; it allows you to stay aware of things around you. I like it as it makes you feel a little less “enclosed inside the computer”. It works for certain workflows, like sending some emails, looking things up, or making a call. The experience gets a little different if you decide to immerse yourself in any of the Vision Pro’s virtual environments.
Some folks refer to it as “deep work”, the type of work you need some serious focus for. I find Vision Pro especially powerful for getting myself into the state of flow that is needed for the heavy lifting. I can immerse myself with context (images, logs, code, mockups) and filter out any visual clutter from the real world.
Imagine a set of windows so big that you can literally stand between them. That is how I like my most powerful Vision Pro setups. You almost become one with your context, seriously. You can create an environment that enables you to really connect with what you’re doing. I love walking around the windows, looking at some code or server output, and sort of getting a feel of it being a “big and working machine”. In a way, it feels like standing in a big machine room. It is really unlike any conventional desktop experience.
Conclusion
I will continue to explore, learn, and experiment with Vision Pro, but already I’m blown away by the spatial greatness of actually seeing the 3rd dimension digitally. It feels very natural in the same sense as the touchscreen on the original iPhone made me giggle whenever I swiped the “slide to unlock” slider. There is a lot to unlock here; come and join me on this next frontier!
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