* The ability to converse with someone with a digital version of your eyes being displayed to them seems useful for conversations that last at-most 5 seconds. After that, people will demand you take off your Vision Pros and converse with them face-to-face.
* The demoed avatar version of you for Facetime lives smack dab in the middle of Uncanny Valley. I would not Facetime with someone using Vision Pro if another option was possible, or substantial improvements were made to make the avatar more realistic
* External use of the 3d camera - The demo shows what appears to be a dad interacting with his kids while wearing the headset and capturing a moment using the 3D camera. Later he watches the 3D video he captured, reliving that moment. They could just call this feature the "Noncustodial Parent" feature, because absolutely no one is going to wear Apple Ski Goggles TM while interacting with their children, unless they are extremely desperate to draw out a few special moments into a year's worth of memories.
I don’t see the advancement needed to make interactions fluid. It’s still the same awkward flicking and snapping.
This tech is still _quite_ distinguishable from magic.
I think in order to truly achieve a magical experience it will take a technological leap similar in scale to the invention of the semiconductor.
It’s just not worth the hassle and until it materially improves reality, it will be a vanity.
I don’t think Steve Jobs would have settled for this product.
I doubt anyone is going to be 100% digital avatar all the time but I want that feature as a non vision pro user! Sometimes you need to be on camera but your not interacting with the call it would be perfect for that!
If you don't see $3,499 of value in the feature set then don't buy one.
Detailed reviews and in-store demos will come next Winter.