I’ve been using an Apple Vision Pro for just a few days now, and I want to tell you all about it. I want to, but to be fair, I can’t. I don’t just mean that I am speechless, although there is some of that for sure. The issue is that there is so much new about this device that I am going to need to use it for at least a few weeks before I really get the hang of it. Also, the thing that I am most curious to try out and review—using the Vision Pro to be productive to get work done—is way too much in a preliminary stage right now. I cannot currently use my work email, contacts, or calendar because Apple has not yet added Mobile Device Management support. [UPDATE 2/6/2024: Zac Hall of 9to5Mac reports that MDM support is coming in the next software update.] I cannot directly use Dropbox the way that I can on an iPad (or even iPhone) because there is no Dropbox app yet. And even for apps that are there, I am still trying to figure out how to make them work well. (For example, only a few minutes ago did I learn how to be much more efficient with the 1Password app having it confirm my identity with a retina scan instead of me typing my password. Tip: tell 1Password to let you log in using “Face ID” even though it isn’t really Face ID.) But even though I cannot possibly write a full review yet, I can provide lots of initial thoughts. And at the risk of spoiling the ending: this is perhaps the most amazing item of technology that I have owned. I am blown away.
Entertainment
I’m definitely ready to start talking about the Apple Vision Pro as an entertainment device. Just one weekend was more than enough time for me to discover that this is an incredible entertainment device and the best way to watch a show if you are by yourself.
I presume that you have seen a 3D movie in a movie theater before. The 3D effects can be impressive, but the movies are less bright and the color is less vivid because 3D glasses act like sunglasses. As a result, I have avoided seeing a 3D movie in the theater for many years. Watching a 3D movie in the Vision Pro removes those limitations. And the end result is simply amazing.
Saturday night, I watched the first half of the 3D movie Avatar: the Way of Water in the Disney+ app, one of many Disney 3D movies available to subscribers of the service. It was beautiful, The colors, the dynamic range, and the realism were all beyond anything I have ever seen before. I started by watching the movie using one of four special Disney environments: I selected the movie theater. When the movie started, the lights around me dimmed and I felt like I was watching the movie in a beautiful theater where I was sitting in the center. But because the movie was so incredible looking, I decided that I wanted an even closer view. When I exited the special environment and just played the movie in a normal window, I was able to look at a corner of a window and change the size of the window—something that you can do in most any app with the Vision Pro. That let me make the video screen just a little bit larger, which for me was even better because it was even more immersive.
As great as that movie was, I was even more impressed by content that filled even more of the screen. In the Apple TV app, there are a few Immersive Videos. They are fantastic, and Apple needs to add many more of these. This is the future. You’ve probably heard a little about them because Apple shows small clips of these videos in the demo reel shown to earlier reviewers that has been written about extensively. One video places you in a music studio with Alicia Keys. Another video, a show called Apple Immersive Adventure, has only one episode available so far and it features a woman walking across a high wire stretched between mountains in Norway. These Immersive Videos fill your entire field of view, and as a result, they do the best job of making you feel like you are actually there. The video quality is crisp, the colors are vibrant, and these experiences make a regular 3D movie with a 16x9 screen feel almost boring in comparison.
Your own photos and videos
And then there is the entertainment value that comes from looking at your own photos and videos. Because you can make the Photos app as big as a wall, your photos and videos are huge and beautiful. If you take a Spatial Video using either an iPhone 15 Pro or the Apple Vision Pro itself, you get a 3D home video that is so much more realistic that it can actually provoke an emotional response. I do wish that you could expand the size of the 3D home videos even more so that they were close to the size of the Apple-produced Immersive Videos. Instead, you can tap a button at the top right to change to Immersive mode, which makes the video even bigger but then produces clouds around the edges and through the rest of your field of vision. Don’t get me wrong, this is pretty cool too, but not as impressive as a video that fills the entire field of sight.
If you take a Spatial Video using the Apple Vision Pro itself, the quality of the camera doesn’t seem to be any better than what you take with an iPhone 15 Pro, and in fact, based on the tech specs, it may actually be worse. However, the videos that you take with the Apple Vision Pro take up a little bit more of your field of view than the iPhone Spatial Videos because they are square, so you see more at the top and bottom. However, Spatial Videos that you create using the Apple Vision Pro still do not come close to taking up the entire field of view like the immersive videos offered by Apple TV+.
Also, Spatial Videos that you take yourself are not as bright or as crisp. My guess is that this all comes down to the quality of the cameras. If a future iPhone (or Vision Pro) supported taking spatial video and pictures with a camera system that supported 4K and HDR, then I suspect that we get closer to the quality (if not size) of what Apple is offering. That would be something special, so it is now on my bucket list for what I hope to see in a future model of the iPhone: take 4K HDR Spatial Videos.
Having said that, don’t misjudge what I am saying about Spatial Videos that you take yourself. They are truly magical and represent a major leap in home video technology. When my son was a baby, my wife and I purchased an HD video camera that recorded to tape. It was expensive, but I figured that in the future I would appreciate having HD videos of those early years instead of standard definition videos. Now that the family TV supports 4K HDR, I’m so happy that I don’t have to look at standard definition videos of my kids when they were young and cute. So at some point in the future, when using who-knows-what generation of an Apple Vision device, I’m sure that I’ll be happy that I took as many Spatial Videos as I could back in 2024.
Augmented reality
The core feature of the Apple Vision Pro is that you can see things all around you. And it is amazing, a new revolution in computing. We are all used to window management on a computer, where you can have multiple windows that overlap to a certain extent—less so if you have a big enough monitor. But when all of the space around you that you can see, even above and behind your head, can be filled with windows, it really is something to experience.
Moreover, if I stand up from the desk where I am typing—and yes, I’m tying virtually all of this review using an Apple Vision Pro—I can walk to another room and then look back and all of these windows are still just sitting where I placed them around the table where I was working. The back of the windows are just gray boxes, but for many of them I can still see some of what is on the screen, and it is just mind-blowing to walk around and even through all of these virtual screens.
You can also open a different window in a different part of the room or even a different part of the house. You can leave a timer app in the kitchen, the Notes app in a different room, etc. There is something incredible about standing in a doorway and seeing different windows floating in different rooms of your house. But they don’t have to stay there forever. You can simply tap the Digital Crown button to move your apps to your current room.
In the future, I’d love to see some setting or third-party app that you could use to perfectly arrange a bunch of windows from a bunch of different apps and then save that setting so that you could restore it in the future. For now, if you turn off the Apple Vision Pro, you need to arrange the windows anew.
Other augmented reality features are also very cool. I’m using a Bluetooth keyboard, and just above my keyboard are autocorrect buttons that I could select to automatically type the next word, activate Siri, or bring up a full virtual keyboard. If I move my physical keyboard, the window floating above my keyboard moves too. It helps to create the illusion that this virtual additional display is a part of my non-virtual keyboard, blurring the distinction between the real world and the virtual world.
Given that this device can recognize a keyboard, I wish that it could also recognize and work well with an iPad or iPhone. You can easily see either one of those devices when you are using a Vision Pro, but Face ID does not work because your eyes are blocked by the Vision Pro device. I’m surprised that Apple did not already create a solution for this. For example, once the Vision Pro authenticates who I am by checking my eyes, it should communicate that to my iPhone or iPad if I am clearly looking at one of them with the Vision Pro. This is just one of many examples of situations in which it is clear that we are using an early version of the system software.
For now, there are only a limited number of ways in which the Vision Pro truly augments reality, blending the real world and the digital world. But it is really cool whenever it happens, and I look forward to seeing more of it.
Controls
You control the Apple Vision Pro by looking around and then, when you want to select something, you pinch your thumb and pointer finger together. To scroll a window, you put your thumb and pointer finger together and then move up or down or side to side as if there was an invisible string between your fingertips.
For the most part, it works quite well for me. However, I have noticed two issues, which are a result of problems that I have with my eyes. I mention them in case you have similar eye issues.
First, I have pretty severe nearsightedness. My prescription addresses this as best as it can (my Sphere is -5.25 for my right eye and -7.00 for my left eye), but because my right eye is much stronger than my left eye, I found that I got better results when I tell the Vision Pro to just track my right eye. You can do this in the Settings app under Accessibility -> Eye Input, where your choices are the default of Both Eyes or Left Eye Only or Right Eye Only. If one of your eyes is better than the other one, this setting is made for you.
Second, I have a condition called Nystagmus, which means that my eyes shake, especially when they get tired. It’s a reason that even a good prescription cannot get me to 20/20 vision. When your eye is your pointer device and your eye shakes, the result is that it is more difficult to select specific items. You can see whether this is an issue for yourself by opening in the Settings app and going to Accessibility-> Interaction (under Physical and Motor) -> Pointer Control -> and then flip the switch for the first option, Pointer Control. This will make a semi-translucent dot appear in the virtual world wherever you are looking, and it is very similar to what you see when you use a trackpad or mouse on an iPad. If you find that the dot cursor follows your eye very precisely, then I suspect you can be very precise in controlling the Vision Pro experience. For me, the Vision Pro just gets a little harder for me to control at the end of a long day.
There are a few times when you can use your hand to “touch” something in virtual space. For example, when the on-screen keyboard comes up, you can use one finger to touch keys on the keyboard, as if you are typing using hunt-and-peck. I find that it is easier to use the on-screen keyboard by looking at a letter and then pinching your fingers on that letter. And for most of your Apple Vision Pro use, you will just be looking with your eyes to simulate a mouse and pinching with your fingers to simulate a click.
Getting work done
This is the part of this review that I had really looked forward to writing. But for now, it will have to wait. As I mentioned at the outset, everything is still just too new. Most of the apps and services that I need to get my work done just don’t exist yet. And even the ones that do exist need more work.
But I can already tell that at some point, hopefully soon, this is going to be an amazing device for getting work done. I’ve already mentioned how interesting it is to place windows anywhere. If you are working with a document and want to set it aside as you type in Microsoft Word, it is great to have so much space. You can just put it up on the ceiling if you want, or to the top right. I enjoyed reading legal briefs using the PDF Expert app on the Vision Pro. PDF Expert doesn’t (yet) have an app specifically for the Vision Pro, but the iPad app works fine.
I’ve seen devices that you can buy to hold an iPad on an arm so that you can position it over you in a bed or right in front of you as you are sitting on the couch. This is what you get with the Apple Vision Pro—plus the ability to pinch the corner of your window and change it from 11” to 70”, which of course you cannot do with an iPad.
And the fact that each window can be so big is truly amazing. I love being able to work with multiple huge virtual monitors—with screens larger and more crisp than anything that I could ever afford in the real world—no matter where I am located. I can easily envision sitting at a small desk in a hotel room and taking full advantage of this setup.
But getting work done requires more than just a screen. If you are typing, you will want to use some sort of external keyboard. The Vision Pro’s virtual keyboard is fine for typing a few letters or words, but for anything more than that you will want an external keyboard so that you can type quickly.
My opinion that you need an external Bluetooth keyboard to get real work done should not really be surprising. I would say the same thing about getting work done on an iPad. Or even an iPhone, if you are typing something long.
One surprise for the keyboard: I had expected for Command-Tab to switch me between apps, or at least to bring up some sort of app switcher. That is missing, and it seems like something that Apple should add. I’m sure that you know how quickly switching apps on any computing device is a core productivity tool.
I also suspect that a physical pointing device could be very useful. Unlike an iPad, you cannot use a Bluetooth mouse with an Apple Vision Pro. Right now, I believe that the only device that works with the Vision Pro is the second generation of the Apple Magic Trackpad, which is currently discounted 15% on Amazon for $109.99. I ordered one so that I can see if it will help me to work more quickly. (I suspect that it will also help with my Nystagmus.)
As the system software improves and the third-party app situation starts to become more complete, I strongly believe that a day will come when I will find that I will prefer to get work done with an Apple Vision Pro (plus a keyboard and trackpad) instead of an iPad (plus a keyboard and pointer device). It’s not there today, but I hope that it comes soon.
Conclusion
As I begin my journey with the Apple Vision Pro, I am incredibly excited. As an entertainment device, it is already amazing. Moreover, it is clear that Apple did a great job at coming up with the 1.0 version of a spatial computing environment. As I type these words, I am looking at these incredible, large windows all around me, floating in virtual space, and I almost cannot believe what I am looking at. The “wow” factor is definitely there. As for using an Apple Vision Pro to get work done, I did write this blog post, so the ability to write and edit is already there right now. But you can tell that it is still early stages. It took the iPhone two years to add the cut, copy, and paste commands, and I cannot imagine using an iPhone or iPad today without that basic feature. I expect to see similarly important improvements over the next year or two with the Apple Vision Pro.
Because there is clearly so much more to come, it makes perfect sense that many folks will wait until a second-generation device comes out and/or wait for the system software to mature. But if you decide to be an early adapter and get a device now, there is certainly a lot to love.