Month: June 2023

MIT computer scientist: Apple Vision Pro could change the world

(CNN): Apple’s new device could… become a new type of computing platform, one as revolutionary as the Macintosh was in 1984 or the iPhone in 2007.

Apple’s headset (which it calls a spatial computer) has the potential to herald a new era of wearable “ubiquitous computing,” a somewhat fuzzy term conveying that computers will become small and be everywhere, ridding us of the need for dedicated computing devices and accessories like keyboards and monitors.

In fact, a wearable computing platform that is always with you and can create displays of any size in real time could eventually replace desktops, laptops, tablets and mobile phones; those are all unnecessary if you can have any number of high-resolution screens floating in the air around you and a virtual keyboard that responds to your hand and eye movements, the main control mechanism of Apple’s Vision Pro.

I see many reasons why Apple may succeed in reaching mass adoption where others have spectacularly failed to do so.

I’m not alone. Cathy Hackl, former enterprise strategist at Magic Leap, told me on Monday, “What you saw unveiled today is the most advanced tech product ever created, it’s a super computer on your face.”

While the first version of Vision Pro will undoubtedly have kinks that need to be worked out, like a short-lived battery with an unwieldy wire, we should remember that the first Mac was also very limited and wasn’t initially a financial success. Yet its user-friendly interface laid the foundation for a new way of computing, just as the iPhone did a generation later.

While the first version won’t be as compact as the glasses in “Westworld” or “Ready Player One,” it won’t be long before you’ll be able to place large screens all around you and manipulate what’s in them, a la “Minority Report.” Unlike Tom Cruise, you won’t even need gloves.

Wired wag: ‘Apple’s Vision Pro is an alarming misfire; will flop’

A Wired wag will “bet everything that Apple’s Vision Pro will flop,” calling it ” a rare misfire” and an “unavoidable failure.”

This is not a “revolutionary” gadget, no matter how confident Tim Cook looks when he says it is. It’s a rare misfire, and a sign that Apple is losing its ability to turn tech-geek novelties into normie must-haves. It doesn’t augur the future so much as suggest that Cupertino doesn’t have a clear view forward…

[A]n Apple headset, no matter how nifty its specs, is still a big honking gizmo plonked between its wearer and the rest of the world, inherently a barrier more than a conduit…

The very basic truth that the appetite for daily-use headsets is simply not there has already damaged the Vision Pro’s reception; the normally rapturous public response to a big new Apple announcement has been tempered with skepticism this time around, with plenty of people pointing out that the VR/AR market is already littered with bold-named failures…

Apple isn’t the same company it used to be. When was the last behavior-shifting new Apple product launched, the type that gets absorbed into a daily fixture?

It’s a tough sell on a conceptual level, so no matter what the execution looks like, it’d be difficult to pull off. To make matters worse, the execution is flawed. If Apple had found a way to make a mixed-reality headset that weighed 4 ounces, or functioned more like regular glasses, maybe. Right now, though, it’s offering a marginally sleeker upgrade to a decidedly uncool-looking genre of headset. The nerd goggles look like nerd goggles…

This is an antisocial device, one which the average person would be wholly reasonable to reject and even ridicule… [T]his yassified Oculus is proof that even Apple can make missteps. One can only hope that the unavoidable failure of Vision Pro might clear the company’s sights, galvanizing actual innovation instead of this disappointing foray into gimmickry.

Via: Wired.com

How to install MacOS Sonoma

For those of you who cannot wait until the Fall, you can install MacOS Sonoma now. But I have to warn you, this is Beta software, and should only be installed on Macs that are dedicated to Beta versions.

You may also want to check this article to make sure your Mac can even run Sonoma.

How to install MacOS Sonoma:

  1. Go to   > System Settings.
  2. Select General > Software Update.
  3. Turn Beta Updates to "ON".
  4. Select the version of MacOS Sonoma you with to install.
  5. It'll check to see if there is an update available.
  6. It'll then download and install MacOS Sonoma.
  7. That's it. 

The installation process can take anywhere from 30 to 60 minutes depending on the speed of your Internet connection and your Mac.

How to install iOS 17 Beta now

Every fiber of my being is telling me not to write this article, but I also know that some of our readers can't wait to get their hands on iOS 17 for iPhone and iPad.

A note of caution, this is BETA SOFTWARE which means it's still in the testing stages, so it may break some necessary features on your device until another beta becomes available.

Without further a-do, here's what you need to do:

  1. Back up your iPad to a computer and/or iCloud if you have not done so yet
  2. Go to the Apple Developer portal and sign-up with your Apple ID to join the developer program
  3. Open the “Settings” app on your iPhone
  4. Go to “General”
  5. Go to “Software Update”
  6. Go to “Beta Updates”
  7. Select “iOS 17 Developer Beta” from the options, then go back to the main Software Update screen
  8. With iOS 17 Developer Beta available, tap to “Download and Install” to begin the process of installing iOS 17
  9. That's it. 

 

 

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