Apple’s mysterious Reality Pro headset just hit a significant achievement last week when it was shown in a large-scope meeting to around 100 of the organization’s top chiefs. That is empowering, as showing it off to countless high-ranking workers recommends the device is almost prepared for launch.
The revelation comes from Mark Gurman’s weekly Power On newsletter, wherein the Bloomberg journalist made sense of that the events denote a notable defining moment in the blended reality headset’s improvement in front of its expected launch at Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) in June.
It’s not the first whenever Reality Pro has been shown to Apple’s VIP — that has been continuing starting around 2018, as per Gurman. The difference here, though, is the sheer scale of the display.
Apple headset could have interchangeable lenses for VR and AR experiences
Apple’s headset faces excessive cost, blurred goals
Apple’s upcoming blended reality headset is supposed to be the most advanced hardware of its sort out there, leapfrogging the work done by any likes of Meta and Microsoft on items like the Quest Pro and Holo Lens headsets, individually. Said to launch conveying the Reality Pro or Reality One marking, Apple has reportedly made a devoted working framework for its headset called xrOS or realityOS that gets vigorously from the mobile experience with iOS. While vivid content consumption will be the concentration, as per spills so far, Apple could try and allow clients to make their own augmented reality applications using the Siri virtual helper.
All that firepower will supposedly be given by a desktop-grade M-series processor, while north of twelve cameras will offer exceptional inside-out motion tracking. However, all that capability also purportedly negatively affects the battery duration, as Apple’s mixed-reality headset is said to have recent two hours on a single charge of the packaged battery pack. The asking cost is probably going to be an obstacle, it seems, as various sources foresee the ambitious headset to cost somewhere near $3,000 a pop.