APPLE chief Tim Cook has revealed he’s using “spatial computing” goggles every single day in an exclusive interview with The Sun.
I sat down with the tech titan to talk about the Apple Vision Pro headset as it finally launches in the UK – and he shared his favourite ways to use the premium headgear, including a futuristic TV habit.
Apple chief Tim Cook admits he’s using the Vision Pro headset every day[/caption] The Sun sat down with Tim at Apple Park in Cupertino, California[/caption] We’ve been testing out the hi-tech goggles, which retail at £3,499 / $3,499[/caption]Apple unveiled the Vision Pro at its annual WWDC event in mid-2023.
In February, the hi-tech specs – which allow you to overlay (and even replace) the real world with apps and screens – went on sale in the US for $3,499.
Now it’s finally going global, bringing it to the heads and eyeballs of gadget-loving Brits with enough cash to afford its similarly lofty £3,499 price tag.
Speaking exclusively to The Sun for the UK launch, Tim revealed what a “spatial computer” actually is – and why it’s important for you, me and everyone else.
“Spatial computing is a big idea, you know, just like the Mac ushered in personal computing and the iPhone really propelled mobile computing,” Tim explained, speaking to us in early June, just before Apple’s WWDC 2024 tech conference.
“Vision Pro will introduce everybody to spatial computing.
“And spatial computing allows you to see, hear, and interact with your digital content right in your physical space. And so you’re able to do things that you can’t do with other technology.
“It’s the most advanced personal electronics device in the world, and we couldn’t be more proud than to deliver it to our UK customers.”
I’m speaking to Tim at Apple Park, the tech giant’s spaceship-like headquarters in the heart of California’s Silicon Valley.
Entering the campus is like visiting the future – appropriate really, because the Vision Pro is about as sci-fi as gadgets come.
The headset turns your world into a computer, surrounding you with floating apps.
But this isn’t pure virtual reality: you can still see the world around you.
That said, you can twist a dial on the goggles to shut out reality and enjoy the peaceful bliss of your imaginary world.
The Vision Pro is Apple’s first-ever headset – and it’s being described as a spatial computer[/caption] The headset puts iPhone-style windows all around you, floating over the real world[/caption]So what is Tim – a tech genius worth billions of dollars, who runs a company valued at trillions of dollars – doing with his Vision Pro?
A lot, it turns out, because he tells me he’s donning the headset every single day.
“I began to use it to screen entertainment. I watched the third season of Ted Lasso on the Vision Pro,” Tim says, proudly.
“I just screened a new show – that’s coming out this week – last night on Vision Pro.
Tim revealed how he uses the Vision Pro to put a virtual 100-inch screen on his ceiling[/caption] The headset offers apps – Disney+ for example, seen here – just like your iPhone[/caption]“And so the ability for me to get in the position that I want to get in – including lying flat and putting the screen on the ceiling – is an incredible kind of experience.
“And of course, it’s a 100ft screen. I mean, it’s amazing the level of entertainment that it delivers.
“And so I use it in that way. In terms of productivity, when you’re working in multiple screens, like so many of us do, the multitasking is so much more efficient on Vision Pro.
“Because you you can take various windows and put them around your physical space.
Here's what you'll pay...
In the United Kingdom:
Apple Vision Pro 256GB / 512GB / 1TB – £3,499 / £3,699 / £3,899
Zeiss Optical Inserts (optional) Readers / Prescription – £99 / £149
AppleCare+ protection – £499
In the United States:
Apple Vision Pro 256GB / 512GB / 1TB – $3,499 / $3,699 / $3,899
Zeiss Optical Inserts (optional) Readers / Prescription – $99 / $149
AppleCare+ protection – $499
“And so I use it in all aspects of my daily life now.”
Sadly, I can’t fit a 100-inch screen in my home. Of course with Vision Pro, that doesn’t matter.
The headset removes the need for space. As you can imagine, that’s useful outside of the home too.
You can turn your airplane seat into a cinema, and your neighbours won’t have a clue. Try bringing a flat screen onto a plane.
If none of this is making sense to you, don’t worry. Even Tim admits it’s a bit confusing until you actually try it.
The billionaire Apple chief admits it’s difficult to explain how impressive the Vision Pro headset is with words[/caption] Apple boasts that the Vision Pro gives you a 4K screen in front of each eye[/caption]“It’s hard to explain it in words, the experience” Tim told me.
“It’s hard to show it in a 2D fashion, what a 3D experience will be.
“And so we’re offering everyone a demo. It’s a very cool experience that you can reserve and not stand in a queue.
“If you don’t want to do that, you can stand in the queue and await your turn.”
There had to be so many breakthroughs to get to this space.
Tim Cook
Yes, you can try it – and for free, no less.
Just go to the Apple Store online and book a personal one-on-one demo. It’s as easy as that.
But be warned: it can be surprisingly moving.
Tim explains that one of the key features – Spatial Photos and Videos – are like nothing you’ve experienced before.
Spatial Photos and Spatial Videos let you time travel back to memories[/caption]They’re detailed 3D images (that you can capture with iPhone or Vision Pro) that you feel like you can almost step into, or even touch.
“It’s an emotional experience to take a demo,” an earnest Tim tells The Sun.
“And so I encourage everybody to go to their local Apple retail store and get a demo.
“It’s interesting to watch people, the reaction that they have. You know many of them tear up.
You control the headset with pinches and swipes in the air – to make this possible, the headset tracks where your eyes are looking[/caption]“Because when you begin to experience your photographs in the Vision Pro, it’s almost like you’re there again.
“And so you can imagine your family photographs as big as life, and you’re there, you’re celebrating a birthday party or you’re celebrating some huge event in your family’s history, it’s amazing.”
Apple spent a huge amount of time, money, and resource to make the Vision Pro visuals as brilliant as possible.
The official line is that you’ve got the equivalent of a 4K TV for each eye.
I’ve tried it, and it certainly feels that way. Everything is crisp and clear and colourful. When fully immersed, you can even forget you’ve got a headset on.
It’s especially great for sports fans. Tim reckons it’s good enough that you’ll want to turn off the TV and put the headset on for the next big game.
“Some people thought it would be like sitting courtside, which would be incredibly special because most of us don’t sit courtside at a game,” Tim said.
“But it’s better than that. It’s almost as if you’re on the court, and you’re face to face with the players. It feels like you are there. You’re face to face with the net.”
The Vision Pro has plenty to offer sports fans, with huge multi-screen viewing[/caption] The headset can even put you on a court or pitch – getting you closer to the action than ever before[/caption] Tim told The Sun that watching sports on the Vision Pro is so immersive that “it feels like you are there”[/caption]The headset really is a stunning feat of engineering, which explains why it costs over twice as much as a top-end iPhone.
I ask Tim what he’s most proud of. Unsurprisingly, he says all of it.
“We had to file over 5,000 patents on this single product,” Tim proudly tells me.
“This is amazing. There had to be so many breakthroughs to get to this space.
“So I’m proud of the total, and the perseverance of the team because this was multiple years in the making.
“This is not something that you decide in two or three years. It’s multiple years. And those multiple years were built on decades of innovation at Apple.”
It’s not an unfair answer: it feels incredibly well-polished for what is a first-generation product.
Compare that to the original iPhone, which didn’t even have an App Store when it came out.
Tim said that the headset is based on so many Apple technologies that it’s not just years but “decades” in the making[/caption] The headset’s interface will feel familiar to anyone who has used an iPhone, iPad, or Mac[/caption] You can still see the real world around you when you’re using the headset[/caption]One of the things that impresses me most, I tell Tim, is how easy it is to control.
Usually powerful and expensive gadgets feel like they’re built specifically for tech geeks: think of a high-end gaming PC or a costly camera-toting drone.
But this headset feels, in many ways, like it’s easier to use than the iPhone.
Eye-tracking in the headset allows you to look at an app and then pinch your fingers to open it. Magical.
And simple hand gestures let you rearrange windows and scroll along virtual web-pages with an ease that feels like you’ve been doing it for years.
And Tim says that’s because you have been doing it for years. Sort of.
“It works the way your mind works,” he tells me.
“The gestures are so easy to learn, there’s no learning curve.
A clever feature called EyeSight shows your eyes to the outside world when you’re using the headset[/caption]The hardware details you're looking for...
Storage: 256GB / 512GB / 1TB
Display: Micro OLED 3D display system (23 million pixels)
Refresh Rates: 90Hz / 96Hz / 100Hz
Processor: 8-core M2 CPU (with 10-core GPU) + R1 coprocessor
Camera:
Sensors:
Audio:
Battery: Up to 2 hours of general use / 2.5 hours of video watching
Connectivity: Wi-Fi 6 / Bluetooth 5.3
Input:
Supported Input Accessories:
Weight: 600 to 650 grams (21.2 to 22.9 ounces)
“And anybody that is using an iPhone can use the Vision Pro very easily.”
The Vision Pro is an odd product because despite being so impressive, this is just the first one.
Apple hasn’t confirmed any plans to make more, but it’s hard to imagine that there aren’t other secret headsets being built and worn deep in the heart of Apple’s Cupertino HQ.
It’s increasingly easy to see a future where headsets like this become more readily available – with several models to fit different budgets.
You can also choose to shut out the real world and fully immerse yourself in a virtual experience[/caption] Mixing reality with computer graphics can give you experiences that no other Apple gadget can[/caption]Maybe one day they’ll even be as common as the iPhone. It might even replace it, in a distant future.
After all, the digital world is huge – arguably too huge to be crammed into the tiny smartphone, seen through its small window of glass.
By contrast, Vision Pro turns your entire world into a computer. And that’s going to change everything.
“I think it is very revolutionary,” Tim says.
Tim said the headset’s features can affect “all of the things that we do every day”[/caption]“I think it delivers stunning entertainment. It unleashes this infinite canvas for productivity. It gives you new ways to connect and collaborate.
“These are just huge ideas that affect all of the things that we do every day.
“And so I’m a huge believer in it.”
Apple Vision Pro is in stores in the UK from Friday, July 12 – and is already available in the US.
Anyone can try the Vision Pro for free – just sign up for a demo at your local Apple Store[/caption]Here's what you need to know...