Apple Vision Pro headset will get its own App Store featuring apps for visionOS
Apple Vision Pro will launch with its own App Store featuring apps created for the new visionOS platform.

Just as with the iPad when it launched, Apple is including a dedicated App Store. That's much sooner than how long it took the Apple Watch to get its own store, and even the original App Store came a year after the iPhone launched.
"Apple Vision Pro will have a brand new app store where users can discover and download all the apps built for visionOS," said Susan Prescott, Apple's vice president of Worldwide Developer Relations, "as well as compatible iPad and iPhone apps."
"We can't wait to see what developers will do with this groundbreaking platform," she continued. "Our amazing developer and app ecosystem is one of the reasons people love their Apple products."
Apple Vision Pro will be available from early 2024. More information about visionOS and its App Store will be revealed closer to the headset's launch.
Read on AppleInsider

Just as with the iPad when it launched, Apple is including a dedicated App Store. That's much sooner than how long it took the Apple Watch to get its own store, and even the original App Store came a year after the iPhone launched.
"Apple Vision Pro will have a brand new app store where users can discover and download all the apps built for visionOS," said Susan Prescott, Apple's vice president of Worldwide Developer Relations, "as well as compatible iPad and iPhone apps."
"We can't wait to see what developers will do with this groundbreaking platform," she continued. "Our amazing developer and app ecosystem is one of the reasons people love their Apple products."
Apple Vision Pro will be available from early 2024. More information about visionOS and its App Store will be revealed closer to the headset's launch.
Read on AppleInsider
Comments
Apple did a lot of things right. If it works well, the Vision Pro may be able to replace a display. But I'm not sure if eye fatigue will be a problem. And for those of us with eczema who scratch our foreheads, eyebrows and noses a lot, that may also be a problem. (Skin fatigue?)
I did predict that Apple would make it work with Facetime by assembling your eyes with your face using an external camera. I just didn't realize the camera would be mounted on the external frame of the device. (I thought they would use some sort of selfie stick contraption.) I also predicted correctly that the new chip would be called the "R1."
Is it possible to link the device to my iris in such a way that a thief would never be able to use my device if they happened to grab it and run away? Or can a thief do a factory reset and match it to his own iris? I would be afraid to use it in public without this.
Apple is essentially revolutionizing the whole AR world and manages to take privacy and security seriously.
Apple does the AR right and nailed it perfectly with UX, unlike many failures of other companies that just don't really think about the whole UX. Their platforms always feel disconnected, incoherent, and awkward.
The $3500 price did take my breath away for a second but I recovered. Is it AC and DC powered or just DC powered. Not being tied to a wall cord is great but that battery will be pricey. If DC only I might want a spare.
By prescription lenses this means ground to an Rx that included correction for astigmatism? $100 isn't bad at all.
The line at an Apple Store to try this will be huge. Maybe Apple should run a credit check (anybody know the move reference?) to see if everyone qualifies for a preview.
The fascinating thing to me is once a user positions their "screens" and "windows", what "anchors" them in place relative to the user's head movements? Anyway these can't get here soon enough.