Apple announces new VR headset Vision Pro, to launch next year - Action News
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Apple announces new VR headset Vision Pro, to launch next year

The company unveiled the Vision Pro, its pricey virtual reality headset at its annual World Wide Developers Conference inCupertino, Calif., on Monday. Experts say the competition in the VR realm will foster innovation and could see other major companies enter the space.

New device will cost almost $5,000 Cdn at launch, but is expected to become more accessible over time

Can Apple's new $4,700 headset take VR mainstream?

1 year ago
Duration 1:56
Apple unveiled its first new product since the Apple Watch in 2015. The Vision Pro VR headset lets users blend augmented reality with everyday life, but its $4,700 Cdn price tag may be a tough sell.

"It's the first Apple product you look through, not at," Apple CEO Tim Cook said while introducing the Apple Vision Pro, the company'snew virtual reality headset that will allow users to overlay an augmented experience over the real world.

Apple announced the VR headset at its annual World Wide Developers Conference (WWDC) inCupertino, Calif., Mondayafternoon, where it also revealed developments for many of its existing products and software.

The Apple Vision Pro is a wearable headset that creates an augmented reality experience with everything from work meetings and meditationto gaming and movies. Apple says it will be available in early 2024, with prices starting at$3,499 US, equivalent to about $4,700 Cdn.

While wearing the headset, users can browse by looking or making hand gestures, which Alan Dye, vice-president of humaninterface designat Apple, says they designed to be "as subtle and natural as possible."

'Apple hit a home run'

The Vision Pro marks the first major product launch for Apple since the Apple Watch in 2015. But it's unclear how large the demand is for the headset. A Bloomberg analysis estimates that the product will generate the company $1.5 billion U.S. ($2 billion Cdn) in sales, or 0.5 per cent of the company's revenue base.

The anticipation that Apple's goggles are going to sell for several thousand dollars already seems to havedampened expectations for the product.

Two men stand in front of the Apple logo.
Apple CEO Tim Cook, left, joins Craig Federighi, senior vice-president of software engineering, for an announcement about new products on the Apple campus on Monday in Cupertino, Calif., where the company announced the Apple Vision Pro, the company's new virtual reality headset set to launch in 2024. (Jeff Chiu/The Associated Press)

Dan Ives, managing director and analyst at the American firm Wedbush Securities,expects the company to sell just 150,000 units during the device's first year on the market a mere speck in the company's portfolio.

By comparison, Apple sells more than 200 million of its marquee iPhones a year. But the iPhone wasn't an immediate sensation, with sales of fewer than 12 million units in its first full year on the market.

Still, Ives considers the Vision Pro a "revolutionary product" that will spur developers to create new, unique applications for dedicated use with the headset. Ives anticipates that sales will increase to onemillion units in the product's second year.

"I think Apple hit a home run," he said. "I think we look out three, four years from now and [see this as] an inflection point for Apple."

Industry experts say that while some mightscoff at the initial product and price, it can take time for new devicesto find their place in the market.

"The example that I would use would be the AirPods, which we made fun of for years," saidDouglas Soltys, the editor-in-chief at BetaKit, an online publication which reports onCanadian startups and tech innovation. "Now it has become commonplace."

Soltysexpects that Apple's history of understanding of what people want out of consumer electronics will help them as the Vision Pro launches. And even though the Vision Pro will debut with a limited number of apps, he saysthe user experience couldbecomemore robustonce developers start creating applications.

"When I saw $3,500 US, I gasped," saidSoltys, of the price."Then I laughed, because that just speaks to how confident Apple is about where it can position this product and who's willing to follow."

Apple for the eyes

Apple's announcement comes days after Meta announced its new virtual and mixed reality headset, Meta Quest 3, set to launch later this year. The Vision Pro introduces Apple as a new competitor in the virtual reality market.

"We're just on the cusp of this technology going mainstream," said Tom Frencel, the CEO and co-founder of Toronto indie game development studio Little Guy Games.

While headmits that past iterations of virtual reality technology haven't lived up to the hype, Frencelsaysrecent developments address many challenges that have been holding it back. For example, he points out thatwhen VR headsets were first released, they were all heavy and tethered to computers now, models like the Meta Quest are much more lightweight withmore powerful hardware.

"It will inevitably happen," he said, noting that he expects numerous technologies to "converge in VR," including blockchain and the metaverse. "It's just the next evolution of computing."

Two women look at a virtual reality headset through a window.
People walk past an Oculus virtual reality headset on display at the Toronto office of Meta the parent company of Facebook. Experts say Apple's announcement about its VR headset will likely create more competition and innovation, possibly opening up the field for other major companies to enter the market. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Tech expertRitesh Kotaksays that while he expects there will be some consumers who will purchase the Vision Pro, businesses will likely be the heavy adopters of the technology early on, given its commercial applications.

He says being able to create and visualize objects in 3D has applications in design and engineering and notes that using FaceTimeto integrate with videoconferencing in real time"might create an opportunity forbusinesses that are looking for hybrid and remote working situations to leverage this type of technology."

2 major players competing in VR realm

"Now at least we have two major players, Apple and Meta, that are competing in the same realm," said Paolo Granata, a professor at the University of Toronto and the director of the Media Ethics Lab.

Granata, who has experimented with VRtechnologyin his classes, saysthe competition will likely create more innovation, possibly opening up the field for other major companies such as Samsung or Sony to enter the market.

At its current price, Granata says the headset is inaccessible for most consumersbutwill likely become more affordable as it becomes more mainstream.

"It takes time to democratize technology," he said. "In the meantime, it's up to us to make sure that this technology can really be built in an accessible, open way and envision the possibilities for a more connected society where no one is left behind."

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Granata says it's also important to consider unintended consequences of the technology in this case, impacts on user privacy and on industries such as gaming, film and streaming media.

"The movie industry will start reacting not justagainst this new technology, but likely responding in a creative way."

New MacBook Air, iOS 17

Other new products introduced at the WWDC include a15-inch MacBook Air, the latest in Apple's popular laptop line that boasts a larger screen, a new six-speaker sound system andan advertised 18 hours of battery life while still maintaining a low weight at 1.49 kilograms. It will be available for$1,749 starting next Tuesday, June 13, 2023.

Apple also shared its new M2 Ultra processing chip, a 24-core processor which Apple says has both increased speed and memory compared to its predecessor, theM1 Ultra.

Company executives also shared key software updates. Notably, they shared key features in the upcomingiOS 17, which Apple says will improve itsautocorrect, and introduce a new standby mode that can display key information while charging the iPhone.

Apple didn't make any major announcements about generative AI products similar to ChatGPT or Google's Bard search engine, but it quietly imbued several smaller features with AI, like live transcriptions of voice mails.

With files from Meegan Read, The Associated Press and Reuters