The Vision Pro 2 is reportedly coming by the end of next year, packing an M5 chip and built for AI βfrom the ground upβ (as Apple might say). Hereβs why this news has me excited, and why I think itβs exactly the right move for Apple.
Why Vision Pro shipped when it did
Weβve known for a while that Appleβs ambitions for its Vision products are long-term.
AR and VR are still in their very early stages of adoption. But the dilemma many tech companies have faced is: how do you build up the technology and platform without having devices out in the wild?
So Apple shipped the Vision Pro earlier this year. It hasnβt set the world on fire or meaningfully contributed to the companyβs bottom line. Itβs arguably too expensive and too heavy. And itβs still going to live or die on Appleβs βspatial computerβ positioning.
But itβs real. Itβs in usersβ hands. Developers are building apps for it. Technologies like visionOS, Immersive Video, and Spatial photos are growing and expanding. Slowly, the Vision Pro is making a βspatial computingβ future more possible than before.
The goal: reaching the masses
Eventually, Apple wants its Vision products to be a huge hit. The next big thing. It wants spatial computing to be something that everyone does.
To get there, though, we need (at minimum) a Vision product that is:
- not as heavy
- more versatile
- less expensive
Thatβs why reports that Appleβs priority is not Vision Pro 2, but rather a cheaper Vision device, make a lot of sense.
But while Apple toils away on the donβt-call-me-Pro version of its Vision line, it needs to keep Vision Pro on the cutting edge.
Thatβs where todayβs report comes in.
Vision Pro 2 gets the upgrades it needs, and no more
Back in June I argued that, while Apple is busy focusing on a cheaper Vision device, it should at least stick an M4 inside the current Vision Pro and call it a day.
It sounds like thatβs more or less exactly whatβs going to happen. Except itβs an M5 instead.
The Vision Pro 2 is reportedly going to include an M5 chip and have a heavy Apple Intelligence focus.
And I say: great!
Apple Intelligence is clearly a huge priority for Apple. So its current absence from visionOS is disappointing for a $3,500, otherwise-cutting edge product.
But if Apple can chip a new Vision Pro in 2025 with an M5 chip and add a bunch of Apple Intelligence features to visionOS 3, it will have done exactly whatβs needed to keep excitement in the platform.
All the while, its priorities can stay fixed on the cheaper Vision product. Because ultimately, itβs that other Vision device that has a better chance of wider success. But in the meantime, Vision Pro needs to remain enticing for early adopters and the curious. These rumored changes should help it do just that.
Whatβs your reaction to the Vision Pro 2 news? Let us know in the comments.