Apple’s Absence Creates a Stir at CES 2024

Apple’s Absence Creates a Stir at CES 2024

CES is coming,​ and if the​ past ⁢is any guide, Apple won’t ⁤be part of ⁣the festivities. And yet, as⁣ is ​often the case, its presence will⁣ be felt across the exhibition floor.

Why? Because while generative ‍AI ⁣(gen AI) might this year appear in everything⁤ (for good or ill),⁤ the‌ other big story​ will be augmented‌ reality (AR) — and Apple’s much-ballyhooed‍ Vision Pro hasn’t even ‍hit the market ​yet.

You can tell this is so by the rash of ⁤Vision Pro rumors, ‌speculation, and​ claimed ⁢design and usage leaks emerging like ⁤clockwork in the run⁤ up to CES.

Call me cynical, but this kind of speculation rarely slips out without some⁢ reason, and with some talk⁢ that​ Vision‌ Pro could ship ‌as soon as this month, well, let’s ‍just say‌ the ‌device will be part of the⁣ of conversation across the CES floor.

Coming ⁣’round ⁣the mountain

The atmosphere around the AR/VR device stalls at CES ⁣will therefore⁣ feature an odd combination of hope and ⁣anxiety.​ Apple is coming. That’s ‍why the industry has been relatively silent ‍since Apple’s Vision Pro unveiling last ​year.

Apple‌ stole the ⁢oxygen.

Put it this way:⁣ all the other VR ⁣device makers⁤ gathered at the show ⁢will figuratively be listening​ out for the intensifying hum of Vision Pro⁢ traffic⁣ bearing down on them from ⁢the⁤ Californian mountains, and while some ​may optimistically say the ​debut will “grow the industry” (™), ⁢deep down⁣ they know⁣ it means‌ they must ⁣wait and see what the product ⁢does and‌ how ⁣it is received​ in⁤ the real world before they sign off on their​ own future development plans.

You see, others know ‍they must ask themselves tough questions before spending ‌valuable R&D ‍dollars on future product design. ⁣Will ⁢their hardware compete? Will ‌they be able to deliver ​the depth of user experience many expect from Cupertino? Will the⁣ Apple product,⁣ with its eye-watering price‍ tag, actually ⁣flop?

The latter is unlikely, but‌ given that ⁢the limited initial audience will consist of wealthy⁣ early adopters ‌and companies that want cutting-edge tech,⁤ what will success look like to Apple, ⁢and ‍how ‍might it set expectation for the category?

What happens⁣ when your ​glasses ​get smarter?

The⁢ other conversational strand at the show ⁤will focus⁢ on generative AI. We know this technology is being woven into a range of products. Smart Eye, ​for⁢ example,⁣ will introduce​ its work to ‍build an in-car automotive assistant capable⁣ of sensing and‌ responding to human emotion. (Eyeris, OMNIVISION, and Leopard are ​also working ‌on a machine ⁢vision led approach to in-vehicle⁤ experiences.)

This ⁢work⁣ hints at how‍ genAI will ⁢be used with machine vision intelligence to augment human/machine interaction ‌by‍ making machines​ that intuitively respond to human⁢ emotion in real time.

Given Apple’s continued work in vision AI and its recently disclosed research pertaining to it, don’t⁢ be‍ too ‌surprised if emotion sensing and real-time⁣ response is  part of​ the company’s ‌future wearable UI roadmap. ‌It makes no sense ⁤for ​it not to be,…

2024-01-05 03:00:03
Article‌ from ⁤ www.computerworld.com rnrn

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