Oh, and all of it cost a few thousand dollars at least, in 1979 dollars, with a 40x25 character-only screen.
The original Apple II required execs to use a keyboard like a (usually female) secretary, have a Sony TV on the desk, and a rainbow ribbon cable. How dorky! With s/w like spreadsheets they outdid their coworkers. Wait for killer apps for #VisionPro. It's worthy of them.
(What I mean by "gesture experience" is thinking how to add use of gestures as part of the UI for productivity apps. Some of us did that for apps for GO's PenApps and MS PenWindows. Probably most of the original people at MS who did that are no longer there, though.)
Microsoft has been working on AR for years. Did they stop hardware and OS work after talking to Apple about #VisionPro, but continue all the Office, etc., software work? Microsoft reportedly made more (after costs) on each original Mac selling software (MultiPlan, Word, etc.) than Apple did the hardware. They have gesture experience from the Pen Windows days.
For anyone who watched ONLY the main WWDC Keynote segment about Vision Pro and then decided Apple had ditched accessibility to leave blind people outside in the cold, I can absolutely recommend this session: “Create accessible spatial experiences”
https://developer.apple.com/wwdc23/10034
#A11y #Accessibility #UIAccessibility #VisionPro #VoiceOver #WWDC #WWDC23
I think I’m one of the (few?) humans who could use the new Apple iFacePlate right now. I’ve got this project where I’m intensely editing a large complex doc, frequently accessing several other large complex docs (& browser) for materials. I have a big outboard screen, but still a painful amount of window shuffling. The ability to simultaneously display and read more BIG windows than any physical screen could manage would make my life way easier.
I was incredibly fortunate to have the opportunity to try Vision Pro this week. The experience was overwhelming in the best possible way. I'm still collecting my thoughts for a longer Design Diary post, but it was so transformative that I'm finding it hard to put the experience into words.
As I work on that, I wanted to ask for any questions folks had with regards to using it and more generally for the platform from a developer/designer perspective. I'll do my best to answer to them.
Another good #VisionPro experience write-up: https://daringfireball.net/2023/06/first_impressions_of_vision_pro_and_visionos
It seems that Apple is "over the bar" on a variety of important "must haves". (One is the consistent "no nausea" reports, including from multiple females. Another is affordable for enough developers.) Maybe they finally got there so it's time to release to developers to innovate.
Thinking how Apple #VisionPro with no handheld controllers and highly crafted use of eyes/fingers mirrors the original iPhone vs. smartphones with keyboards. Also running full "desktop" browser vs stripped-down "mobile" ones.
@danb
* Privacy - no one can see what you are working on or viewing…
Thinking about Apple #VisionPro vs laptops/iPads/phones/etc:
*** What is #VisionPro much better at? ***
Some obvious ones:
- Lots of pixels in wide field of view & lots of perceived 3rd dimension space => more places/ways to put/organize things
- Eye tracking instead of mouse/touch => standing/sitting no desk/lap, quicker, hands-free
- Finger(s?) flexing vs finger tip press => richer gesture language
- More immersive sound w/transparency => quality, aural cues including location
More?
I've seen and read a bunch of people's accounts with the #VisionPro, but the one from Tested is definitely the most in-depth and hype-restrained. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f0HBzePUmZ0 #WWDC23
@emilymbender is the most brilliant and generous teacher we have on what LLMs can, should, cannot, and should not be expected to do. I am so grateful that she uses social media to teach. Do read her Thai library thought experiment explaining language and understanding.
h/t @ct_bergstrom https://medium.com/@emilymenonbender/thought-experiment-in-the-national-library-of-thailand-f2bf761a8a83
Given all hype about #5G I wrote an explanation that (I hope) doesn't require getting into the technical weeds to see past the BS.
https://rmf.vc/5GHype
The kernel panic was introduced in an early version of Unix and demonstrated a major difference between the design philosophies of Unix and its predecessor Multics. Multics developer Tom van Vleck recalls a discussion of this change with Unix developer Dennis Ritchie:
"I remarked to Dennis that easily half the code I was writing in Multics was error recovery code. He said, 'We left all that stuff out. If there's an error, we have this routine called panic, and when it is called, the machine crashes, and you holler down the hall, `Hey, reboot it.`'"
(Text from Wikipedia)
In 1962, when John Glenn was set to be the first American to orbit the Earth, he bought a $40 camera and some NASA guys helped jerry-rig it so it could be used in his spacesuit.
Completely not NASA sanctioned, it brought back the first photos taken by a person in space.
https://petapixel.com/2023/03/23/how-john-glenns-40-camera-forced-nasa-to-rethink-space-missions/
The launch of ChatGPT Plugins is of the most significant platform offerings ever. Embedding, distribution, utility. And it reminds me of @danb ‘s Cornucopia of the Commons essay where the act of using the database adds value to it. http://www.bricklin.com/cornucopia.htm
One of the VisiCalc guys, CTO Alpha Software, DBDemo, Trellix, blogger, podcaster, SocialCalc, iPad app: Note Taker HD, president of Software Garden, Inc.