The release of Apple’s new mixed-reality headset, the Vision Pro, could mark a major change in how users experience the metaverse, with developers potentially moving away from the complete isolation of virtual reality.
Unlike today’s virtual reality headsets, which focus on full immersion, Apple’s Vision Pro – Unveiled On June 5 – The application can also be superimposed on the real world, giving users the opportunity to “interact with digital content in a way that feels like it is physically present in their location.”
Apple’s AR headset revealed – Apple Vision Pro pic.twitter.com/UpNM7cH5yL
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Speaking to Cointelegraph, KPMG’s Head of Metaverse Alice Su believes that Vision Pro will shift developer focus away from fully immersive virtual worlds.
The headset introduces a new technology called “Eyesight”, which uses lens trickery to make the user’s facial expressions appear natural to outsiders. EyeSight also allows the display to switch between a transparent and opaque view, depending on whether the user is consuming immersive content or interacting with people in the real world.
“With traditional or other headsets, there is a barrier between people wearing it and people not wearing it. It’s like you’re in two different worlds,” she said. “There are far fewer barriers between people now, so you can have a relatively smooth conversation.”
Apple EyeSight lets people see your eyes when you’re using a headset pic.twitter.com/p773ZPjwRZ
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Su said its eye-tracking technology also has great potential, which could be used to help create personalized experiences.
Apple’s pupil-tracking technology works by detecting users’ mental states based on data from their eye movements and their pupils’ response to stimuli. It then uses artificial intelligence to make predictions about their feelings.
I spent 10% of my life contributing to its development #visionpro While I worked at Apple as a Neurotechnology Prototyping Researcher in the Technology Development Group. This is the longest I’ve ever been on a single attempt. I am proud and relieved that it is finally done… pic.twitter.com/vCdlmiZ5Vm
— Sterling Crispin️ (@sterlingcrispin) 5 June 2023
“They put a lot of neuroscience or neurotech research into this headset. The most overlooked part, Su said, is the predictive pupil dilation tracking technology, which is based on his years of neurological research.
Su predicted that Vision Pro would inspire developers to use “emerging fields such as neuroscience and generative AI to create more personalized and predictive experiences”.
Peter Zing, founder of the blockchain-based project Transhuman Coin, also praised the headset’s design for its “integration with the natural way we interact as humans” and hailed it as one of the great leaps forward for the metaverse. Pointed to unique eye-tracking capabilities.
“By detecting pupil dilation, the headset is acting as a proto-brain-computer interface when a user is expected to select something they are already thinking about.”
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Asked whether Vision Pro could stage a comeback in a struggling metaverse industry move – which has seen nearly all blockchain-based virtual worlds lose more than 90% of their native tokens – Xing didn’t hold out much hope. It was, at least not in the short term.
He pointed out that it is highly unlikely that Apple would encourage a decentralized approach that could jeopardize its “profitable walled garden”.
While he and many others noted a clear lack of gaming focus in product releases, Xing believes that Apple’s recent partnership between Disney and Marvel provides a good source of games and other interactive experiences to look at. can get
Xing believes that this is what the metaverse needs to move from a “gamer-centric world” to the mainstream.
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