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Can a $3,500 headset replace your TV? We tried Vision Pro to find out

arstechnica.com

2 points by Townley 2 years ago · 9 comments

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sho_hn 2 years ago

This piece makes the AVP look a lot like Slow News Season in Big Tech. The pros and cons to the AVP have been obvious to most since the moment it was announced, yet here we are with a weeks-spanning series of use case-specific reviews, mostly coming to the conclusion it doesn't really warrant that extended coverage.

SlightlyLeftPad 2 years ago

I can’t wait for the Apple vision kids so my 4 year old can watch hours of cocomelon someday. Lol, TIHI

downrightmike 2 years ago

hahahaha what a waste.

ijhuygft776 2 years ago

Yes. Do I want that? No.

  • sho_hn 2 years ago

    It's obviously not a unqualified "Yes", either. Even the worst $200 TN LCD TV would be superior at watching shows with my wife together vs. one of us sporting an AVP by our lonesome.

    Or put another way: There's a couple of different contexts and occasions for using a TV, and buying an AVP is making a choice for only one of them. A $3500 TV is a lot more flexible in this regard.

    • strangattractor 2 years ago

      My wife and I tried sharing a single eye each of the AVP together. It was distracting unless you closed the eye not being used for the AVP. The resolution was adequate for a single eye.

      The head strap was also not large enough to hold the device around both our heads simultaneously. After fashioning a head strap that fit us both I noticed that I could not get stereo sound given that AVP only has 2 speakers. Attempting get my son to watch with us proved to be impossible. All in all the device is somewhat of a failure when watching with others socially.

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