Apple
rolled
out
updates
to
all
of
its
major
operating
systems
this
week,
and
the
Vision
Pro
was
no
exception.
With
visionOS
2,
the
company
has
a
chance
to
show
the
relative
few
who
bought
its
spendy
headset
—
and
those
who
might
yet
—
that
it’s
still
committed
to
the
new
platform.
After
a
few
months
of
using
it
in
beta,
visionOS
2
isn’t
a
dramatic
change
—
it’s
more
like
a
smoothed-out
version
of
the
software
the
headset
launched
with.
The
addition
of
things
like
new
gestures,
better
device
support,
and
a
couple
of
splashy
features
has
removed
a
lot
of
the
friction
of
using
the
Vision
Pro
and
should
give
people
who
own
it
a
reason
to
dust
it
off
and
take
it
for
another
spin.
Improving
the
basics
Let’s
start
with
updates
that
really
ought
to
have
been
in
visionOS
on
day
one.
Apple
has
added
Bluetooth
mouse
support
and
the
ability
to
rearrange
apps
on
the
homescreen,
which
were
strictly
laid
out
in
alphabetical
order
before.
You
can
also
pull
the
iPad
and
iPhone
apps
out
of
the
folder
they
default
to
and
put
them
with
your
Vision
Pro-native
apps
—
hooray!
I’d
really
like
to
be
able
to
create
new
folders
because,
once
you
get
over
three
pages
of
apps,
finding
one
can
be
cumbersome,
especially
if
you
don’t
remember
its
name. Oh
well,
maybe
next
time.
These
new
hand
gestures
are
a
welcome
addition.GIF:
visionOS
2
hand
gestures
Getting
around
the
operating
system
is
easier
now
thanks
to
new
gesture
controls
that
let
you
summon
the
homescreen
by
tapping
your
fingers
together
after
a
circle
appears
when
you
look
at
your
palm.
Flip
your
hand
over
like
you’re
looking
at
your
watch,
and
the
circle
morphs
into
a
pill-shaped
status
bar
showing
the
time,
battery
level,
and
volume
level.
Tap
the
status
bar
to
get
to
Control
Center
or
tap
and
hold
to
adjust
the
volume.
Compared
to
the
old
way
of
looking
up
to
tap
on
a
small
circle
to
bring
control
widgets
down,
the
new
gestures
feel
more
natural
and,
importantly,
more
fun.
(Months
later,
I
still
have
to
resist
the
dramatic
urge
to
do
an
unnecessary
hand
flourish
and
say
“magic!”
when
I’m
bringing
up
the
homescreen.)
Apple
also
added
the
ability
to
navigate
using
a
paired
Bluetooth
controller,
such
as
the
Nintendo
Joy-Cons.
Working
with
what
you’ve
got
Doing
work
with
the
Vision
Pro
is
a
lot
better
now
thanks
to
the
addition
of
mouse
support
and
a
new
Keyboard
Awareness
feature
that
lets
your
keyboard
punch
through
the
virtual
environment,
either
persistently
or
when
you
bring
your
hands
near
it.
There’s
no
more
fumbling
for
the
home
row!
Unfortunately,
Apple
only
names
its
own
keyboards
when
describing
the
feature
—
it
works
with
my
mechanical
keyboard
but
not
reliably
so.
The
one
big
missing
piece
for
people
who
want
to
use
their
Vision
Pro
for
work
is
the
curved
ultrawide
virtual
display
that
Apple
announced
at
WWDC.
Apple
says
that’s
coming
later
this
year.
The
fun
stuff
Outside
of
productivity
features,
Apple
has
introduced
some
fun
new
features
and
improvements,
such
as
the
ability
to
convert
photos
into
3D
spatial
pictures.
It’s
a
lot
like
retroactively
adding
portrait
mode
on
the
iPhone,
and
it
can
be
impressive
in
the
way
it
adds
a
new
emotional...
dimension
(sorry!)
to
old
family
pictures.
But
these
generated
spatial
images
also
suffer
from
some
of
the
same
drawbacks
as
that
retroactive
portrait
mode.
The
conversion
can
do
weird
things
with
hair
and
edges,
and
if
someone
in
a
photo
is
wearing
glasses,
the
3D
effect
hilariously
breaks
down,
making
them
look
like
they’re
wearing
gag
glasses
with
fake
eyeballs
pasted
on
the
front
of
the
lenses.
I
tried
to
capture
this
in
screenshots,
but
you
have
to
see
the
phenomenon
in
3D
for
it
to
be
obvious.
Another
plus:
you
can
now
save
one
guest
user’s
hand
and
eye
data
so
they
don’t
have
to
set
it
up
again.
I
won’t
say
it’s
not
a
welcome
tweak,
but
it
doesn’t
go
far
enough.
I’d
really
like
to
be
able
to
permanently
save
multiple
people.
Let
me
share
my
expensive
headset!
We
can’t
afford
another
one!
Immersing
myself
in
The
Vergecast.GIF:
Safari
in
visionOS
2
Watching
video
content
in
Safari
is
a
little
nicer
in
visionOS
2.
Now,
when
you
tap
the
full-screen
button,
the
webpage
and
browser
disappear,
leaving
you
with
a
floating
video
view
that
behaves
a
lot
like
it
would
in
any
other
video
app.
Most
of
the
time,
that
includes
being
able
to
switch
it
to
immersive
mode,
transforming
it
into
a
gigantic
movie
screen
that
floats
above
the
environment
you’re
in,
casting
light
on
the
ground
or
water
below.
It
helps
to
take
the
sting
out
of
the
continued
lack
of
a
native
YouTube
or
Netflix
app,
although
I
still
like
to
use
third-party
apps
like
Juno
and
Supercut
for
those
services.
In
addition,
Safari
now
supports
WebXR
by
default
in
visionOS
2,
so
you
can
take
advantage
of
web-based
VR
and
AR
games
and
experiences.
So
far,
the
games
I’ve
tried
using
this
on
are
either
very
bad
or
don’t
work
with
the
Vision
Pro’s
gestures,
but
I’d
love
to
hear
some
recommendations.
(Verge
readers,
assemble!)
Time
to
buy?
As
nice
as
these
changes
are,
I’m
not
sure
that
visionOS
2
will
turn
the
ship
around
for
Vision
Pro
sales,
which
a
July
analysis
suggested
won’t
break
500,000
for
the
year.
And
that’s
not
surprising.
People
are
still
hesitant
about
VR
for
reasons
like
comfort
and
price.
Maybe
Apple’s
rumored
cheap
headset
could
change
things
in
a
couple
of
years.
Even
if
you
can
afford
the
$3,499
Vision
Pro,
the
visionOS
2
update
doesn’t
fix
everything
Nilay
Patel
brought
up
in
his
Verge
review,
like
its
narrow
field
of
view
and
the
loneliness
of
using
it.
But
it’s
a
step
in
the
right
direction,
and
it
shows
that
Apple
hasn’t
given
up
on
the
Vision
Pro.
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