Reports: Apple is halting its next high-end Vision in favor of something cheaper

-

[ad_1]

Vision Pro, seen from below, in a display with a bright white light strip overhead.

Samuel Axon

A report by tech news site The Information suggests that Apple is shifting its augmented reality priorities. The next high-end version of the Vision Pro has purportedly been canceled while work continues on a more affordable version with a reduced feature set.

Citing both an employee in Apple’s headset supply chain and one working in headset manufacturing for Apple, the report claims that the cheaper Vision product—perhaps around the $1,600 mark—is due before the end of 2025. Apple had originally intended to present this headset alongside the Vision Pro, similar to the models available in each iPhone release. The more affordable model would likely have fewer cameras, smaller speakers, and weigh less, though Apple has struggled to bring down the cost of the unit’s displays.

Apple’s efforts in augmented reality are closely watched by other players in the headset space, so even a momentary, situational step back from high-end headsets could have significant repercussions. The Information cites current and former Meta employees in describing how the company had killed plans for its own higher-end headset in January 2023, but it then began work on a new premium model five months after Apple’s Vision Pro debut.

The Vision Pro will launch in China, Japan, Australia, and many European countries later this month. The Information’s sources suggest that Apple has produced roughly 500,000 Vision Pro headsets and will not make significantly more, despite the entry of these new markets.

Apple has not responded to The Information or other outlets. Ars contacted Apple for comment and will update this post with any response.

In Senior Editor Samuel Axon’s extensive experience with the device, the home theater aspect of the Vision Pro, and specifically its high-quality display units, is the “one use case that’s a slam dunk.” Reducing the quality of the Sony micro-OLED displays in the Vision Pro, and their “staggering 3,386 PPI (pixels per inch)” density, would seemingly cut at a solid selling point for the device. It is otherwise not made for walking around, and while working in the Vision Pro is possible, it’s not ready to replace anyone’s standard setup yet, especially if they have regular web meetings.

[ad_2]

Source link

Latest news

What Happens During a Fire Watch? Inside the Process and Protocols

When a fire alarm system fails or a sprinkler line goes offline, things don’t pause until it’s fixed. In...

Bremont Is Sending a Watch to the Moon’s Surface

A multifaceted decahedral black ceramic bezel and sandwich-style three-piece case—a reworking of Bremont's signature Trip-Tick construction—house a chronometer-rated...

The Most WIRED Watches at Watches and Wonders 2026

The case is white zirconium oxide ceramic with a Ceratanium bezel and back, rated to handle temperature swings...

Bitcoin Price Pumps 6% Near $75,000 As Shorts Liquidate

Bitcoin price surged more than 5% in the evening of April 13, climbing near the $75,000...

You Can Soon Buy a $4,370 Humanoid Robot on AliExpress

Listing consumer electronics on the internet's large ecommerce marketplaces is a key step in “democratizing” the products, allowing...

Must read

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you