• TheFogan@programming.dev
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    14 days ago

    I mean did anyone think of the vision pro as more than a very expensive tech demo? It was always too big, too heavy to be viewed as something people were expected to wear all day long.

    • RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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      14 days ago

      Why do people think you’re supposed to wear that all day long? I don’t think it was ever marketed as a permanent piece of headwear.

      I’ve always assumed that every VR or AR system was intended to be used for a session and taken off, seems obvious.

      • BirdObserver@lemmy.world
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        14 days ago

        I don’t think Apple themselves marketed it this way, but viral photos of people being spotted on subways and walking down the street wearing one probably didn’t help sell the product.

        • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.zip
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          14 days ago

          They marketed the headset as being able to replace the functions of basically everything an average person uses a laptop/pc, cellphone, and tv for.

          People routinely use computers and tvs for many hours at a time.

          People routinely spend hours on their phone and basically always have them in their pocket or nearby.

          They showed people wearing the things in planes, to watch 2-3 hour movies.

          Sitting down in their (strangely TV-less) living rooms to watch 2-3 hour movies.

          Doing … some kind of work you’d do on a laptop, but easily being able to keep the things on, kick a ball around with your kid, and then seamlessly go back to working.

          Wearing the headset as you are unpacking at a hotel, and then taking a video phone call with them.

          Not the thing ringing, you putting the headset on, and then taking a call.

          No, you’re just already wearing the headset, having just arrived in a hotel, implying you just had them on as you took your luggage up to your motel, like a hat.

          https://youtube.com/watch?v=IY4x85zqoJM

          Taken as a montage, you certainly get the impression that you’re encouraged to just wear the thing all the time, anywhere, that its an ‘all-device’ that replaces a whole bunch of other devices, and is easily used/worn in many settings for long periods of time.

          • BirdObserver@lemmy.world
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            14 days ago

            Yeah, that’s weird. Like, I get the idea, but the tech just hasn’t caught up to it yet. It needs to be as convenient as just putting on a light pair of glasses - on top of not being especially light or comfortable, VR is still a “process” which requires a degree of effort and adjustment every time you use it, which really kills the whole concept of it being a convenient tool.

            I think Apple is probably more likely than most to make something like this take off eventually (Google Glass’ biggest failing was also that it made you look like a total dork, whereas Apple somehow managed to make AirPods cool), but this seems more like a software proof of concept for hardware that doesn’t exist yet.