Appleās Vision Pro mixed-reality headset goes on sale on Friday, February 2, and the first wave of reviews has just landed. Itās probably fair to say that the consensus tilts towards the positive, but having spent longer with the hardware than was possible for the initial preview, early reviewers have all found reservations worthy of note.
Letās plunge in and check out the verdict.
Design and weight
Following the preview event, where testers were allowed roughly an hour with Vision Pro, there were concerns that longer sessions could prove less pleasant. And thatās borne out by todayās reviews, which express mixed feelings about the deviceās comfort.
Writing for CNBC, Todd Haselton strikes a happy note. āThe build quality is superb,ā he reports. āApple used top-of-the-line glass, screens, and metals. It feels like a premium headset and itās comfortable to wear.ā
But Nilay Patel, representing The Verge, is less convinced. āThe most noticeable thing about the hardware after a while is that itās justā¦ heavy,ā he writes. āI keep joking that the Vision Pro is an iPad for your face, but itās heavier than an 11-inch iPad Pro and pushing close to a 12.9-inch iPad Proā¦ Youāre just going to feel it after a while.ā
Itās not just the weight thatās a worry, either, as Patel adds that Vision Pro became ādefinitely warmā after long sessions.
Somewhere in the middle sits Scott Stein, reviewing Vision Pro for CNET. āItās comfy at first,ā he begins, ābut after half an hour the headset feels top-heavy and pushes in on my cheeks a bit.ā
Displays
Vision Proās user experience is dependent on lush displays, and all the reviewers were impressed. āThe very first thing I noticed in my first demo was how good the displays were,ā writes Stein. āThe 4K-resolution-per-eye, micro-OLED display tech Apple uses is basically the āretinaā moment for VR and AR.ā
āApple is very proud of the displays inside the Vision Pro, and for good reasonāthey represent a huge leap forward in display technology,ā adds Patel. āThey also look generally incredibleāsharp enough to read text on without even thinking about it, bright enough to do justice to movies.ā
Petter Ahrnstedt / Foundry
Audio
So much for vision; what about sound? Again, Vision Proās speaker setup came in for consistent praise.
āThe built-in speakers are great,ā reports Haselton. āThey get nice and loud and support spatial audio, so if you turn your head away from the movie in front of you, the sound stays in the same place, much like if you were watching a real TV. Music and movies sounded fantastic, with full surround sound.ā
Patel, meanwhile, described the speakers as āgood and loudā and said they do āa convincing job of rendering spatial audio.ā
However, all the reviewers warned that Vision Proās speakers are a little prone to leakage. āThe speaker buds are open, angling down to aim at your ears similar to Metaās Quest headsets, and can be heard by others in the room,ā notes Stein. āA more enclosed feel comes if you slip in AirPods, which auto-connect seamlessly.ā
Interface
Writing for the Wall Street Journal, Joanna Stern found Vision Proās controls and interface relatively easy to useā¦ most of the time. āGetting around is intuitive,ā she writes, āeven if other people in the room think youāre playing a demented game of charades. At times, the Vision Proās eye tracking didnāt respond to my movements. Adjusting the fit of the headset got things back on track.ā
CNETās Stein, however, suspected that the inclusion of an instruction manual hinted at problems in this department. āItās a sign that setting up and navigating this spatial computer is a whole new universe, and not always intuitive,ā he explains. And sure enough, he finds that controls ātake getting used to. Any icon or button I look at is highlighted, grows in size or glows, and tapping my fingers selects it. Itās jarring at first.ā In the end, however, he concludes that it is intuitive.
Nilay Patel, too, has reservations. āThe first few times you use hand and eye tracking on the Vision Pro, itās awe-inspiring,ā he says. āIt feels like a superpower. But the next few times, it stops feeling like a superpowerāand in some cases, it actively makes using the Vision Pro harder. It turns out that having to look at what you want to control is really quite distracting.ā
Apple
Mac Virtual Display
The deviceās ability to sync seamlessly with a Mac has been touted as a transformative productivity feature. But what is it actually like to work using Vision Pro? Pretty good, according to Patel. āMac display sharing works really well, and Apple ecosystem tricks like Handoff and Continuity are pure magic in this context,ā he writes.
But there are worries about typing using Vision Proās software keyboard. āThe floating keyboard is useful for search or typing quick messages, but you wonāt be able to type very fast at first,ā says Stein. And Stern is more critical still: āThere is a built-in virtual keyboard so you can type in thin air. But it will drive you mad for anything longer than a short messageā¦ I started getting real work done once I paired the Vision Pro with a Bluetooth keyboard and mouse.ā
Personas
A major part of Vision Proās sales pitch is its ability to connect you with colleagues and loved ones. But as a bulky and enclosing headset, it also has the potential to create isolation. Does it work from a social point of view?
Not perfectly. For a start, the Persona avatars created for use in FaceTime calls and elsewhere were found to drift into the Uncanny Valley. āOn FaceTimes with friends and family, the reviews were unanimous, reports the WSJās Stern. āāYou look awful,ā my sister said.ā
ā[My Persona] looked like a much older version of me,ā adds Haselton. āMy colleague thought I looked like an 80-year-old man. My wife laughed.ā
Stein, meanwhile, worries that the device is too isolating. āMy wife says she doesnāt like this, that Iām so removed from everything,ā he explains. āMy son calls it a phone for my face. They have a point.ā
The EyeSight feature, which puts realistic images of your eyes on the front-facing displays to encourage a sense of connection with people nearby, was not a hit.
āEyeSight might as well not be there,ā is Patelās verdict. āItās a low-res OLED with a lenticular panel in front of it to provide a mild 3D effect, and itās so dim and the cover glass is so reflective, itās actually hard to see in most normal to bright lighting. When people do see your eyes, itās a low-res, ghostly image of them that feels like CGI.ā
Apple
Movies and entertainment
Another selling point is entertainment. Would our reviewers turn down a trip to the cinema in favor of a night in front of Vision Pro?
Stein is convinced. āRight now, the closest thing to a killer app the Vision Pro has is its cinema-level video playback,ā he writes. āIf you go for a demo and see it, youāll probably be just as stunned as Iāve been.ā
Haselton enjoyed the entertainment offering too. āI loved watching movies with the headset,ā he writes. āI [also] used the NBA app, which was updated to work on the Vision Pro, to stream four games at once, with the main game in the middle and others pinned to the sides. Itās wild.ā
Finally, The Vergeās Patel admitted that he āwatched far more of Top Gun: Maverick than I intended to just because it looked so good blown up to drive-in movie size, floating over a mountain.ā
Augmented Reality
Most of the applications discussed so far refer to virtual reality, where fictional images are displayed in a completely enclosed fictional world. But Vision Pro offers mixed reality, which also includes augmented reality, where digital images are superimposed on photographic images of the world around you. Is this effective?
Stern thinks so. āThe Vision Pro is the ultimate culinary computer,ā she enthuses. āI launched the Crouton app, and placed the Balsamic Mushroom and Sausage Pasta recipe to one side of the kitchen. The āwowā moment came at the stove when I dragged one timer over the boiling pasta and another over the browning mushrooms. They just hovered until time was up.ā
Stein, meanwhile, was impressed with the technical performance in augmented reality. āAppleās passthrough cameras are the best Iāve seen, with almost no distortion,ā he reports.
But Patel has a more existential concern about augmented reality: there simply isnāt enough of it. āOne of the weirder things about visionOS (and the Vision Pro itself, really) is that thereās not a lot of true AR in the mixāas in, actual interaction between physical objects in your space and digital ones,ā he explains. āAfter all these years of Apple talking about AR, I counted exactly three things in my entire time with the Vision Pro that offered a preview of the AR future.ā
Battery
A common response to the initial demos was a worry that Vision Pro simply doesnāt last long enough between charges. Our reviewers acknowledged this.
Stein regretfully notes āthe limited battery life. The Vision Pro lasts about two hours or so on a charge despite its big battery. You could keep it USB-plugged into a nearby outlet via the battery, but thatās a lot of cabling. By comparison, my MacBook Air lasts well over a day.ā
The battery pack didnāt bother Stern much, āeven if I looked like a high-tech marionette. But I did have to charge every two to three hours, so most of the time, I plugged myself into the wall with the 5-foot cord.ā
Patel found the whole thing amusing. āItās very Apple that the battery is not actually bigger so it can provide more than two and a half hours of run time,ā he chuckles.
Apple
Apps
Are there enough apps? Our reviewers felt not.
āThe biggest unanswered question about Vision Pro is how many unique apps will emerge for it,ā writes CNETās Stein. āAt the time of this review, prelaunch, the App Store shows Vision Pro-optimized apps, but pickings are slim.ā
Haselton, meanwhile, notes the widely documented absence of Netflix and Spotify, but adds that āthere are lots of others that I couldnāt find: 1Password isnāt thereā¦ You wonāt find Uber, DoorDash (but thereās GrubHub!) or Amazon. None of Googleās apps are hereā¦ Popular games like Diablo Immortal and Genshin Impact arenāt available. Facebookās apps arenāt here, so no Instagram.ā
And Nilay Patel argues that while itās hard to judge the app ecosystem for a brand-new product, āI feel totally comfortable judging the iPad app ecosystem at this point, and Apple shipping its own podcast and news apps as iPad apps on the Vision Pro feels like a sign in a lot of ways.ā
Price
The $3,499 question: is Vision Pro worth the money? Probably not at this point.
The WSJās Stern decided to state very early that āYouāre probably not going to buy the $3,500 Apple Vision Pro. Unless youāre an app developer or an Apple die-hard, youāre more likely to spend that kind of money on an actual trip to a Hawaiian volcano.ā
Scott Stein, meanwhile, describes the product as āunbelievably expensive.ā
Verdict
With all that said, did our reviewers feel that Vision Pro is a success? Would they recommend a purchase? In most cases, no, but they remain impressed by the technology.
āThe headset is the best wearable display Iāve ever put on,ā reports Stein. āBut at its price, and with so few VisionOS apps at launch, the Vision Pro isnāt a device Iād recommend to any of my friends or family. [It] comes with its own drawbacks and limits all over the place. But itās also, at its best, a stunning look at the future.ā
Joanna Stern writes that the headset āhas all the characteristics of a first-generation product: Itās big and heavy, its battery life sucks, there are few great apps and it can be buggy.ā
āIt sounds amazing, and sometimes it is,ā adds Patel. āBut the Vision Pro also represents a series of really big tradeoffsātradeoffs that are impossible to ignore.ā
Haselton was perhaps the most positive of the four reviewers, so letās end on a happy note.
āWhile it has some shortcomings,ā he writes, āitās easily the most fun new product Iāve tried out in years. Iām convinced that if Apple eventually sells cheaper versions, weāll see millions of people using them in the coming years. Itās Appleās most exciting product in years and itās the best example yet that this will become a new way of computing.ā
Source : Macworld