10 – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Virtual Reality

Jon Porter
Jon Porter
Vision Pro’s Personas look a little crisper after latest beta update.

MacRumors reports that Apple’s 3D face scans have been updated after the latest visionOS 1.1 developer update. The feature is still labelled as a “Beta,” but the update prompts users to recapture their Persona for “the latest appearance updates.”

Oh, and the update also lets you reset your face computer if you forget your passcode, which wasn’t originally possible.

Emma Roth
Emma Roth
This healthcare group just bought over $100,000 worth of Vision Pro headsets.

Sharp HealthCare in San Diego got a shipment of 30 Vision Pro headsets to explore how they can be used in healthcare, including as a potential way for anesthesiologists to monitor a patient’s vitals:

One idea is to put those readouts into the headset and have them appear around an anesthetized patient’s head if the headset was set to use its outward-facing cameras to pass through a view of the real world, allowing information to be overlaid on top.

I’m not sure how I would feel waking up to my anesthesiologist with a Vision Pro on their face.

Wes Davis
Wes Davis
Could emulators be great in the Vision Pro?

This is clearly the worst way to play a Game Boy Advance game in VR, but I think the excellent passthrough video of the Vision Pro could make for some very cool nostalgic emulation.

At the moment, I can’t shake the mental image of a Virtual Boy with Bluetooth controller support I can put my face into. Of course, this is in a fantasy world where Apple allows emulators on the Vision Pro App Store.

Wes Davis
Wes Davis
This is the entire Vision Pro motion sickness label.

Apple’s motion sickness support page tells you how to minimize possible nausea and other symptoms while using the Vision Pro. The company even offers a little label to tell you when an app or “Apple Immersive Media” has “larger amounts of motion.”

And this is it. This is how you know.

Jess Weatherbed
Jess Weatherbed
Resetting the Apple Vision Pro’s passcode is a real farce.

Unlike other Apple devices that can be reset at home, if users forget their passcode or disable their Vision Pro by entering it incorrectly too many times, they’ll need to take the headset to an Apple store or ship it in for the device to be wiped and reset.

More evidence that this is clearly a first-generation product.

Wes Davis
Wes Davis
JerryRigEverything got scratchy with the Apple Vision Pro.

Is a glassy tech product launch complete without a destructive JerryRigEverything video?

He highlights a big difference between Apple’s smartphones and the Vision Pro: The front cover succumbs to scratches at a Mohs hardness level of 3 (The iPhone 15 Pro’s glass screen scratches at 6). That’s because, as iFixit also pointed out over the weekend, the Vision Pro’s glass sits under a plastic layer.

Wes Davis
Wes Davis
There’s a new Apple Vision Pro ad wandering around Snapchat.

Apple doesn’t seem to have posted this ad in any of the usual channels — one X user says they spotted it on Snapchat.

Anyway, this person had a good idea picking Napoleon to watch, considering its 2-hour-and-38-minute runtime is more or less the same as the the Vision Pro battery pack’s.

Emma Roth
Emma Roth
That’s one fancy SIM tool.

Its size befits the price of what it comes with: Apple’s $299 Developer Strap for the Vision Pro.

The tool (which is actually engraved if you look closely enough) is used to disconnect the Developer Strap from the headset, in case users want to swap to using a Dual Loop Band or Single Knit Band instead.

Wes Davis
Wes Davis
A more detailed look at iFixit’s Vision Pro teardown.

iFixit’s Charlie Sorrel wrote up a deeper dive blog to complement the teardown video the repair experts published yesterday. This is the most detailed photography of the Vision Pro’s bits and bobs we’ve seen online so far.

iFixit says it has “more detail on the lens system and silicon coming in a few days.”

A picture of the Vision Pro without its front glass layers.
The Vision Pro, partially torn down.
Image: iFixit
Wes Davis
Wes Davis
You can’t walk and Vision Pro at the same time.

Of course there are plenty of videos circulating showing people “using” Apple’s headset while driving and walking — it’s an easy bit to snag views with!

As Luke Miani’s video here shows, you’ll only walk through your apps if you try, and Travel mode, which is meant for use on flights, is not a solution. It’s evident in other videos, like Casey Neistat’s, that Vision Pro wearers have to stop moving to use its apps.

Wes Davis
Wes Davis
Here’s Marques Brownlee’s Vision Pro review.

Although the unboxing and “what it’s like” videos aren’t really reviews, Brownlee’s latest video — the actual review — is more of a closing chapter of a trilogy chronicling his thoughts on Apple’s very fancy headset.

This moment says a lot about the quality of the passthrough video — not just visual fidelity, but latency also:

I also had a moment where I was using the Vision Pro for a while and I had my Mac and some other monitors around me, and then I took it off and then I went and did something, and then I came back and before I put the headset back on I looked up at the wall to where I thought a window was going to be.

Wes Davis
Wes Davis
Halide sums up the stereoscopic photography of the Vision Pro.

Portrait mode images aren’t 3D — iPhones use depth mapping to determine where everything is in space, then they use machine learning to apply simulated bokeh (that is, the blur that optical lenses give you when focusing on a subject).

iPhone camera app maker Halide explains how the Vision Pro’s “spatial” photos, which use the Vision Pro’s “stereoscopic 3D camera system,” aren’t that.

Chris Welch
Chris Welch
Casey Neistat’s Apple Vision Pro video is a wild ride.

Now that Apple’s “spatial computing” headset is officially out in the world, we’re already starting to see some truly surreal (and wildly entertaining) content. Easily my favorite so far is Casey Neistat’s new video, which sees him taking the Vision Pro through the streets of New York City, onto the subway, and into the heart of Times Square. The reactions are everything.

I burst out laughing at the 3:43 mark, when Casey freezes in the middle of the subway staircase to respond to a text message — using only his eyes and fingers, of course.

(Everyone, please: don’t wear this thing while controlling any type of transportation.)

Wes Davis
Wes Davis
“Almost like analog VR.”

Painter Steven Novak made what he calls a “portal painting” — a concave painting meticulously made to be a little like sticking your head inside of a 360-degree (or, I suppose, 180-degree, in this case) picture and looking around.

Here’s another video showing, in more detail, how he made it. He doesn’t reveal how much it costs to make, but it sounds like it’s... probably more than a Vision Pro.

Wes Davis
Wes Davis
What does the Vision Pro look like without the front glass?

Honestly? Apart from leftover residue, not bad, from the look of it in this pic shared by iFixit CEO Kyle Wiens.

Hopefully, that front screen still working means you can forego the $799 front glass replacement cost if you didn’t pony up for two years of AppleCare Plus.

Wes Davis
Wes Davis
The Vision Pro “isn’t compatible” with Bluetooth mice.

9to5Mac pointed out the caveat in a new support page Apple published yesterday. The company lists the Magic Trackpad as supported, but makes no mention of the Magic Mouse, so presumably that’s lumped in with Bluetooth mice.

Also, while “most Bluetooth keyboards” will work, Apple says its own older, removable-battery-powered keyboards and trackpads are incompatible with the Vision Pro.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
This is what happens when you drop an Apple Vision Pro.

Sam Kohl of Apple Track tweeted a picture of a cracked Vision Pro soon after west coast Apple Stores opened, and now you can see how it got that way.

Bumping into a wall, or even dropping it directly on the glass from head height didn’t immediately break the cover glass. The fall that shattered the glass came from a ceiling height of about 10 - 12 feet, directly onto the headset’s immense and expensive glass front, and the headset still mostly worked.

Emma Roth
Emma Roth
Even the Vision Pro isn’t safe from an iFixit teardown.

iFixit has obtained Apple’s mixed-reality headset. It should begin the teardown process soon (despite doubts about its repairability), hopefully giving us the chance to see all the components and cameras hiding behind its glass cover display. The teardown video is coming this weekend.

Emma Roth
Emma Roth
Apple’s “First Timer” Vision Pro ad highlights eye-tracking plus gesture and voice controls.

The Vision Pro is out today, and Apple’s latest ad for the device shows what it might be like to interact with the headset for the first time.

Emma Roth
Emma Roth
Snarky weather forecasts — in mixed reality.

Carrot Weather has offered a first look at its Vision Pro app launching today, which features comical weather forecasts optimized for visionOS, along with a new 3D weather globe you can explore in your physical space. You can also play mini-games and interact with Carrot’s AI character via the “ornament” in the main app window.

1/5Image: Carrot Weather
Emma Roth
Emma Roth
You can reserve a Vision Pro demo as soon as Monday, February 5th.

Apple is taking reservations now from its website. But if you can’t wait that long, Apple stores are offering demos of the Vision Pro on a first come, first served basis today and over the weekend.

Tim Cook already made an appearance at the Apple store on Fifth Ave in New York, where he greeted customers lined up to buy or try the headset.

Emma Roth
Emma Roth
Here are all of the 3D Disney movies available on the Vision Pro.

A mix of 42 popular Disney flicks, including Finding Nemo, Avatar: The Way of Water, and Star Wars: The Force Awakens are headed to the Vision Pro headset in 3D. Disney Plus subscribers will get access to the whole catalog, but non-subscribers can still rent or buy 3D movies from the Apple TV app.

Image: Disney
Jon Porter
Jon Porter
Here’s Tim Cook wearing an Apple Vision Pro headset.

You know you wanted to see it, now we have it thanks to a new Vanity Fair interview with Apple’s CEO which prominently includes images of him wearing the headset, (which we didn’t see at its launch).

“I watched the third season of [Ted] Lasso on my ceiling and it was unbelievable!” said Cook.

$3,499, justified.

Tim Cook wearing Vision Pro in office setting.
Tim Cook wearing the Vision Pro in his office. Alas, no images of it messing his hair.
Image: Vanity Fair
Emma Roth
Emma Roth
Another perspective on the Apple Vision Pro.

Our friend Marques Brownlee posted an Apple Vision Pro unboxing yesterday, but now he’s back with an overview of what exactly the headset can do.

He gets into how to set up the (somewhat unsettling) personas for use in apps like FaceTime, which involves scanning your face and then adjusting lighting, skin tone, and brightness. You can even choose to add a pair of digital glasses. Brownlee doesn’t show what a persona might look like with eyewear, but judging by how the avatars are looking so far, I bet it would be pretty silly.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
How long can one person wear an Apple Vision Pro?

Our review of Apple’s Vision Pro included an...interesting avatar call with Wall Street Journal tech reporter (and Verge alum) Joanna Stern, whose review you can watch and/or read right here.

Was it necessary for her to try to wear Apple’s spatial computing headset for 24 hours, even on the ski slope? Yes. Yes, it was.