Apple Makes the Vision Pro Store Demo an Entertaining Ride video     – CNET

Apple Makes the Vision Pro Store Demo an Entertaining Ride video – CNET

Apple Makes the Vision Pro Store Demo an Entertaining Ride

VR/AR Productivity

Speaker 1: Okay, now there’s Rhinoceros on top of me. Does everyone do this When they get the demo, do they start putting their hands up?

Speaker 2: The way most people will experience the Apple Vision Pro is by walking into an Apple store and getting a demo. I have been covering the Vision Pro for weeks, but this reporter had one more area to explore. What does Apple show customers when they test drive a luxury headset? I had to get my own Apple Store demo to find out if this is the only interaction people may have. With mixed reality, apple needs to make a good first [00:00:30] impression, what happens in 30 minutes to make customers want to spend their money and take the leap into spatial computing? So earlier this week, I visited the flagship New York City store on Fifth Avenue to get the full Apple experience. I’m Bridget Carey, and this is one more thing.

Speaker 1: All

Speaker 2: Right. Taking Vision Pro for a test drive Apple Store employees are your guide on your Vision Pro journey. My store guide was Quinn and he made sure everything fit well and he walked me through all the [00:01:00] controls and directed me toward apps to try the whole time. Your guide can see what you are doing on an iPad and that makes it pretty smooth. Okay, I would need you

Speaker 1: To teach me that or

Speaker 2: Watch some sort of tutorial. I wouldn’t even

Speaker 1: Know that

Speaker 2: I should point out here that I could not capture what was going on inside the headset during my demo, but I’m going to show you examples of what I saw. Some things we recreated some footage is what Apple made in promotional videos and the whole 30 minute demo really [00:01:30] flew by for me, but I’m just going to give you the big highlights. After the headset is calibrated to your eyes, you learn just by jumping into it. It starts with the Photos app. You are seeing these vibrant professionally shot photos, which are way more stunning than any of my vacation photos. The cool stuff is the panoramic nature scenes, and of course spatial photos and videos in 3D. You may have seen example videos at Apple shows where you see kids blowing out candles on a birthday cake, but I am telling [00:02:00] you that in the demo it is so big in front of you, it’s like I can stick my nose in the birthday cake. There is a very strong brain connection because of how close it all feels. That’s

Speaker 1: Really cute.

Speaker 2: They upped

Speaker 1: The cuteness on that one.

Speaker 2: There is an artistry to the types of 3D scenes Apple created and while you’re in the demo, you’re thinking, what could I do with 3D video?

Speaker 1: Yeah, it’s very big. It’s like if you were standing there, but I also still know I’m in the Apple store.

Speaker 2: We then jumped [00:02:30] into the immersive background environments. This is what I think of as the Vision Pro wallpaper. You turn the dial up on the crown and you leave the Apple store and find yourself at a peaceful lake at Mount Hood in Oregon Mount

Speaker 1: Hood. That’s so neat. Your

Speaker 2: Eyes see everything So crystal clear. Now this recording does not do it justice because the only thing clear in the screen capture recording is what your eyes are focusing at the moment, [00:03:00] but I could see every little detail. Honestly,

Speaker 1: When you pause and you can see all the tiny little

Speaker 2: Minute pebbles and

Speaker 1: Gravel on you expect your foot to be there. I expect to just be standing right there.

Speaker 2: That’s the detail that wows me the most. They had me read some text on Safari. I opened up a recipe app and then just a few minutes later we are back at Mount Hood and it’s raining ever So lately you can see each droplet hit the lake.

Speaker 1: It’s raining. It’s raining now in [00:03:30] my environment, it was not raining before. I don’t feel wet. I see it. I hear it.

Speaker 2: I can see the

Speaker 1: Rain really far away too. The light rain. It’s like a sun shower if you

Speaker 2: Will, but

Speaker 1: That’s weird. Just wait. The environment just changed throughout the day. It does, it

Speaker 2: Does. So not only are people going to feel wowed by being transported to what is essentially a living wallpaper, but at this point in the demo, I have complete ownership of my space. I am moving [00:04:00] Windows anywhere I want. I am reading things up close or further away, and now it’s the finale. They’re taking me to the movies. You open up Apple TV and we are taken to clips from Avatar The Way of Water. It’s a movie designed for 3D and I’m seeing characters swimming with sea creatures just coming right at me. Apple is using James Cameron to sell this thing, but also Apple used Mario as in the Super Mario Brothers movie. Just a few seconds of a scene with Princess Peach, Mario and Toad looking out over [00:04:30] the kingdom and awe with an epic soundbite. They knew

Speaker 1: Exactly what clip they were picking for this, and same with the water.

Speaker 2: These short clips are invoking feelings of bigness of other worldliness like the hope of the future is just placed right in front of you, even though I’m still at a plain wood table in a store. The grand finale pulls up all the best tricks of 3D. There’s this collection of immersive video clips from special shows on Apple Vision Pro. Now it starts with this shock. What that you’re seeing. Alicia Keys singing [00:05:00] right smack in front of you.

Speaker 1: I didn’t expect that.

Speaker 2: This was not like a normal movie. All of this content is just hugging you in 180 degrees of eight K 3D.

Speaker 1: Okay, I am seeing Alicia Keys singing right in front of me. I could touch her Steinway, I could touch her mic even. Oh my gosh.

Speaker 2: You are jumping from clip to clip big open landscapes then bam, closeups of baby rhinos walking right up to you. These are stunning visuals places I will likely never visit and someone is walking a highline 3000 feet [00:05:30] above Norway’s fjords. Yeah, it was a good thing. I was sitting down. There were teases of what is possible with sports. I saw unique perspectives. I’m watching a soccer game from the top of the Goal net. I’m watching baseball from near the dugout as a player runs to first base. It’s just a couple of minutes of sensory overload and I am eating it all up with a spoon.

Speaker 1: I would watch a whole nature program like this.

Speaker 2: This was not my first time putting on the Vision Pro headset. I got walkthrough when I borrowed the headset from CNET Reviewer [00:06:00] Scott Stein. I have a link here to the whole video on what it’s like to share Vision Pro with someone else if you want to check that out. And what was really different about this demo compared to sharing one with someone else is if you take off the headset in your demo, you can put it right back on without recalibrating. You do not have to go through setup again like you do if you share it with someone else. That also strengthens this feeling of ownership and control and confidence you have during your store. Demo makes you feel like it’s yours. But this store [00:06:30] demo taught me what Apple believes is the best feature and that is entertainment 100%. Before leaving my demo, I asked what if someone comes here and has questions about what it’s like to work on this machine?

Speaker 2: What about typing on it? Yes, your demo guide can pivot to help answer your questions. I was shown what it’s like to practice a keynote presentation in the Steve Jobs theater. I opened up a notepad to try typing, which was not impressive after watching all of those cool AK immersive videos. I think if I was to do a demo again, I would want to try [00:07:00] typing with a real keyboard in front of me. But I think by focusing on family home, movies of kids and showing you what’s possible in the very best of entertainment, apple is hitting on the unique and emotional side of this tech, making you think about your own family memories, making you want to dive into new worlds and feel a sense of awe. Yeah, apple is spending that demo moment tugging on your dreams and your heartstrings. And it did tug on my face if just a little.

Speaker 2: I found myself trying to adjust [00:07:30] it a bit throughout so it didn’t feel too tight or too heavy. And I think if the demo went longer than 30 minutes, I would be feeling it more. I walked away confident in using it with a little bit of desire to keep poking around. There was no talk about gaming. What else could I see with just a little more time? I want more baby rhinos for sure though. Please transport me to Baby Rhino land anytime. I’m not feeling like I need to buy one right now, but it did really make me curious on what could [00:08:00] potentially come with entertainment. I might get the FOMO feelings later. This is going to be an interesting time of people tinkering with 3D content and seeing what’s possible. Oh, and there’s one more. One more thing. A lot of folks are testing out what is possible with 3D photos and videos in Vision Pro and it’s being shared for anyone to check out.

Speaker 2: There’s a crowdsource database of spatial videos and panoramas. The site is called Share spatial everything.com and some Vision Pro fans got together to create this place [00:08:30] to share their photography. If you go to an Apple store to demo the Vision Pro, there are all these professional 3D photos and videos preloaded in the walkthrough, but when you take it home, you only get to see what’s in your photo library. So the best way to see what’s possible in 3D is to just have people share their own spatial content with others. You can take your own spatial videos with the iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max in Landscape video. You just got to click on the little pro icon to record it in 3D, and if you do not have a Vision Pro to view it well, [00:09:00] these files also can be viewed inside a Meta Quest headset. If you want to do your own Vision Pro demo, you can book an appointment on apple.com or the Apple Store app, and you can also talk to someone in the store if there is availability for Walk-ins. If you had a store demo, please tell me in the comments how you felt about the experience and was it much different than mine? What is the biggest thing you want to test out if you got to take it for a spin? Thanks for watching and I’ll catch you next time.

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Bridget Carey

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