Apple's rumored AR/VR headset might require nearby iPhone, Mac connection

By ANI | Published: September 3, 2021 06:19 PM2021-09-03T18:19:42+5:302021-09-03T18:30:02+5:30

American tech giant Apple's rumored AR/VR headset will be designed to rely on another device, and may have to offload more processor-heavy tasks to a connected iPhone or Mac.

Apple's rumored AR/VR headset might require nearby iPhone, Mac connection | Apple's rumored AR/VR headset might require nearby iPhone, Mac connection

Apple's rumored AR/VR headset might require nearby iPhone, Mac connection

American tech giant Apple's rumored AR/VR headset will be designed to rely on another device, and may have to offload more processor-heavy tasks to a connected iPhone or Mac.

According to The Verge, a report suggests that Apple is reportedly working on a custom chip for the headset; an SoC that's intentionally missing capabilities found in Apple's other processors.

While the new chip won't have Apple's neural engine, which handles AI and machine learning, it's reportedly designed to be better at wirelessly sending and receiving data, and compressing/decompressing video than traditional chips, which makes sense if the headset is designed to stream data from another device rather than doing the heavy processing itself.

Sources claim it's designed to be as power-efficient as possible for maximum battery life, something that both removing unused parts of the chip and streaming data from another device might help with.

For wearable technology, like a watch or set of glasses, there's always been a delicate balance between battery life and performance/capability. The original Apple Watch handed off many tasks to a connected iPhone, though Apple was eventually able to make its onboard processor powerful enough to handle many of them.

If the idea of Apple's headset relying on a separate device sounds familiar, it might be because of earlier reports, which mentioned that initial versions of the headset were meant to work with a separate "stationary hub, which in prototype form resembled a small Mac," until Jony Ive stepped in to say that it should be self-contained and Tim Cook sided with his design chief.

Though Ive no longer works for Apple, that doesn't necessarily mean Apple's going back to a bulky or stationary hub.

Reports suggest the AR/VR headset still has its own CPU and GPU inside and suggests it might be able to communicate with a phone or tablet or even work in a basic stand-alone mode. Some of Apple's devices, like the Apple Watch, can still perform basic tasks in low battery mode.

The same reports also suggest that the device will have an "unusually large" image sensor, as big as one of the headset's lenses, which has apparently been difficult to manufacture.

It hasn't shown up in previous leaks, but The Verge says it's designed to "capture high-resolution image data from a user's surroundings for AR". That might come in handy considering the headset is reportedly both an AR and VR device.

Since it's difficult to do VR without completely obscuring the user's view, and difficult to do AR without the user being able to see the outside world, the image sensor could be meant to provide a view of the user's surroundings from inside the headset -- similar to Oculus' passthrough view, but perhaps at higher quality.

As for what the headset will actually do, Apple CEO Tim Cook has long been enthused about AR and how it will "transform the way you work, play, connect and learn," and let people have "enhanced" conversations, according to The Verge.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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