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More info CREAL and ZEISS collaborate for a digital vision care solution Lightfield optics provider CREAL has finally found a first use case where to test its interesting solution. It will collaborate with ZEISS to create a digital solution for vision tests. It was a sort of color picker tool of Photoshop but in real life.
The use of eye, hand, and voice interactions make the interface with the headset natural and easy to be learned. The genius part has been mixing eyetracking with hand micro-gestures. It will have tools for building for it, and aside from the usual Apple tools, developers can use Unity to create content for it.
This immersive experience is crafted to foster exploration, with Apple Vision Pro’s advanced hand-and-eye-tracking capabilities enabling interactive storytelling at each juncture. Additionally, the package includes ZEISS Optical Prescription inserts to enhance clarity for those with vision impairments.
On the outside, the headset features five sensors, six microphones, and 12 cameras, allowing for hand, eye, and voice tracking. Inside, there’s a ring of LED lights, which project invisible patterns onto the user’s eyes to boost eye-tracking accuracy. How much will Apple Vision Pro cost?
As part of its commitment to accessibility, Apple is working with ZEISS to offer optional optical inserts for the device: “Readers” will cost $99, meanwhile prescription standard optics will cost $149. The services come alongside leading enterprise tools for Apple’s devices like Zoom. VR|MR 2024 wrapped up this week.
The Apple Vision Pro headset is getting ready for its 2024 debut, and XR developers are already leveraging the device’s SDK to create a range of immersive productivity tools. The Vision Pro will be powered by two Micro OLED 4K displays, each with a resolution of 3800 x 3000 per eye.
” The Vision Pro, a new computing device, allows users to interact with digital content using “natural and intuitive tools” Cook told audiences that headset wearers no longer control the device primarily with handset devices but with their eye gaze, voice, and hand gestures. Apple’s Vision Pro lenses.
Apple’s outlined elements help to provide a spatial computing experience for users, including deep considerations for XR space, immersion, passthrough, spatial audio, eyetracking, hand tracking, ergonomics, and accessibility. Additionally, the package includes ZEISS Optical Prescription inserts that improve clarity.
It’s one of the most powerful devices I’ve ever used, with exceptional multi-tasking capabilities, hand and eye-tracking, and phenomenal visual fidelity. The prescription lenses for the Quest 3 start at $50, too – half the price of the Zeiss lenses for reading and a third of the cost of prescription lenses for the Vision Pro.
Optic ID Iris-based biometric authentication OS VisionOS Audio Spatial audio with dynamic head tracking, a 6-mic array with directional beamforming Battery 2 hours of general use or 2.5 and Wi-Fi 6 Input Hands, eyes, voice, keyboards, trackpads, and game controllers IPD 51-75mm Weight 21.2-22.9 Plus, the eyetracking is insanely good.
What separates it from the competition is more advanced spatial features, like exceptional hand and eye-tracking, and a proprietary operating system (VisionOS), designed by Apple. ZEISS optical inserts will cost between $99 and $149. This means both tools allow you to navigate the virtual and real worlds differently.
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