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More from Everything we know about Apple’s Vision Pro

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
How the Vision Pro is manufactured.

As preorders opened for Apple’s new headset, Tim Cook posted this video showing shots of mostly-automated production steps involved in building the Vision Pro.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Apple employees get a nice Vision Pro discount.

They’re eligible for 25 percent off the $3,499 headset, according to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman, meaning the cost for Apple staffers is around $2,600 (though Gurman says that’s before “taxes and options.”)

Gurman also says that executives Mike Rockwell and Alan Dye mentioned surgery and training as potential uses for the Vision Pro in an internal video. I’ve heard similar ideas somewhere else before...

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Here’s Fruit Ninja on the Vision Pro.

In Super Fruit Ninja, you’ll use your hands to chop up fruit, according to a writeup on Apple’s website. I can see how it might be fun, but I don’t know if it will be $3,499 fun — especially when I can still just play Fruit Ninja on my phone.

A screenshot from Super Fruit Ninja.
A screenshot from Super Fruit Ninja.
A screenshot from Super Fruit Ninja.
1/3Image: Halfbrick Studios
Apple Vision Pro hands-on, again, for the first time

I know what I saw, but I’m still trying to figure out where this headset fits in real life.

Victoria Song
Jay Peters
Jay Peters
The Apple Vision Pro has passed through the FCC.

You can look through the FCC filings here. (It’s lots of tests and reports, so it may not be the most interesting reading.)

Pre-orders open on Friday ahead of the device’s launch on February 2nd.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Keep an iPhone or iPad close by if you’re ordering a Vision Pro online.

If you’re spending $3,499 to be one of the first 70,000 or so people with Apple’s Vision Pro, we can probably assume you own a recent iPhone. But just in case, 9to5Mac points out details from an Apple email explaining the online ordering process.

Despite rumors of required in-store appointments for face scanning, it looks like Apple will let you use FaceID on another device to judge the fit requirements and provide a current prescription if you need the $149 vision-correcting lenses.

Have an iPhone or iPad with Face ID nearby. When you order Apple Vision Pro, you’ll need to scan your face with an iPhone or iPad with Face ID. This helps us determine the right size Light Seal and head bands, which work together to give you a precise fit. Make sure your Apple Store app is up to date. For the face scan, you’ll need the latest version of the Apple Store app, which became available on January 11.
Apple Vision Pro pre-order instructions
Image: Apple email
Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Vision Pro launch prediction: 60k to 80k units.

Supply chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo closely follows Apple’s production plans and is saying that for the February 2nd launch day, “Apple will produce 60,000 to 80,000 units of Vision Pro,” with around 500k shipping in 2024.

We had our first Vision Pro experiences last year at WWDC, and in just a couple of weeks, everyone can decide if they’re ready to spend $3,499 for an early entry to the world of spatial computing.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Apple doesn’t want developers making apps for its VR headset to call those apps VR apps.

“Refer to your app as a spatial computing app,” Apple says in visionOS developer guidelines reported on by 9to5Mac. “Don’t describe your app experience as augmented reality (AR), virtual reality (VR), extended reality (XR), or mixed reality (MR).”

Yes, visionOS may be used to power not-VR apps in the future, and I get why Apple may want to distance itself from terms like VR or MR. But the Vision Pro device that comes out on February 2nd is a VR headset, even if Apple won’t admit it.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Sounds like the Vision Pro’s battery won’t last through Oppenheimer.

You’ll be able to watch shorter movies, though; Apple has updated its Vision Pro website to say the headset will let you watch “up to 2.5 hours” of video. When Apple first announced the device, the company had only said that the Vision Pro’s battery would offer up to two hours of use.

A screenshot from Apple’s Vision Pro website showing the battery life statistics.
According to Apple, that video playback figure was “tested in conjunction with an Environment, using 2D movie content purchased from the Apple TV app.”
Screenshot by Jay Peters / The Verge
Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
So, what can you do with a Vision Pro?

In addition to running iPhone and iPad apps or mirroring your Mac, Apple says the Vision Pro can stream movies or TV shows from Disney Plus and Max on an HDR screen that feels 100 feet wide, while the Apple TV app will have “more than 150 3D titles” plus there are Apple Immersive Video experiences with “180-degree, three-dimensional 8K recordings captured with Spatial Audio.”

Game Room, What the Golf?, and Super Fruit Ninja will be some of the spatial games rolling out when the Vision Pro launches February 2nd.

The App Store as seen from within the Apple Vision Pro headset, with a constellation finder experience, as well as other app suggestions.
A screenshot of the Vision Pro App Store experience.
Image: Apple
Dan Seifert
Dan Seifert
Deal Alert: free polishing cloth with Vision Pro purchase.

Apple’s new Vision Pro headset may be expensive, but if you act quick and place a preorder for the $3,500 device on Friday, January 19th, the company will throw in an Apple Polishing Cloth, a $19 value, for free.

Wes Davis
Wes Davis
Apple will probably try to steal some CES thunder with a Vision Pro announcement.

That’s according to Mark Gurman in today’s Power On newsletter in Bloomberg.

Apple doesn’t participate in CES, of course, but Gurman writes that he still expects an announcement about Apple’s fancy AR / VR headset to come “in the next week or so” ahead of a February release.