Cool Ideas For Vision Pro Apps

vision pro app ideas

After Apple's presentation of the Apple Vision Pro, the media was inundated with pieces that stated, "Cool..." since negative commentary attracts many readers online. but what's the most important use case?

Since I am not a developer, all I have seen are the product demos that were given during the keynote. Fifty ideas for Apple Vision Pro apps were still generated after I gave myself fifteen minutes to think about them.

Since I am not a developer, all I have seen are the product demos that were given during the keynote. Fifty ideas for Apple Vision Pro apps were still generated after I gave myself fifteen minutes to think about them.

Is it possible that some of the items on my list are duplicates of software that already exist for the or Mac? Yes. Do you think that some of these are based on Apple's demo apps? Yes. Has anyone mentioned them on podcasts focused on Apple since I started writing this piece? Yes. Can you believe some of these concepts? Sure thing.

The Apple Vision Pro, however, will make these apps shine.

What I consider to be the core magic of Apple Vision Pro—that it gives the user a portal into very personal, first-person experiences—is considered in all fifty of my suggestions. There will be apps that cater to this fundamental aspect of the platform that will make it incredibly addicting.

So, without further ado, here are fifty app concepts aimed at the fields of learning, sightseeing, recording one's inner thoughts, shopping, personal development, and amusement. With any luck, my wish list will serve as motivation for the programmers who have the power to turn these visions into reality.

Entertainment

Brace yourself for a new kind of television show—especially comedies—that will transport you to a theatre, complete with 3D sets and actors acting right in front of you. Oh, I see. Ideally, Apple would have a system in place to produce televisions. Hold on! Indeed, they do!

Buy front-row tickets for events including concerts, Cirque du Soliel shows, Broadway shows, and more. Take in your surroundings in full, both visually and aurally. Pick and choose if you want to pay attention to the people around you.

Imagine yourself immersed in a three-dimensional rendition of your favourite tunes, complete with pulsating, spinning, gyrating, and cascading colours and effects.

Use a "band simulator" game to play a virtual instrument (the drums are simple!) or join forces with pals to form a real-life virtual band.

Make the Time Lord's TARDIS appear in your living room... Then check that it's "bigger on the inside" by stepping inside.

Playing games

Keep an eye out for games that put more emphasis on observation than movement, such as those that require you to watch events unfold or analyse the nuances of your surroundings. Engage in "study this room and use the details you can see to solve this murder" or "choose your own adventure" games that let you shape the story according to your choices.

Play a game or use a simulator that shows how different perspectives may give the same event entirely different interpretations. Maybe you get to play the role of a "juror" who witnesses the incident from different angles during reenactments and your opinion on the matter evolves accordingly.

Meet a wide selection of furry companions in virtual reality (VR) who can join you in your virtual world or vice versa.

Tap your fingers together to guide the balloon towards your virtual friend's avatar in the game "Balloon Volleyball," which you may play with a distant pal. You might also use a shared virtual deck to play cards and put out a table. Another option is to use a shared virtual chessboard.

Collaborate with friends to solve a puzzle in a virtual escape room.

Get out of the house and explore the park instead of just sitting through a DVD. Construct a haven according to your specifications, including the water features, landscaping, and flower beds that you adore. Watching the garden flourish with the passage of time will astound you.

In order to solve a puzzle in a video game, you have to hop between six different chairs at a table.

Drink your way to nausea, dizziness, and vomiting in the "Bar Simulator" game, where each successive round of drinking makes you more tipsier.

In a world where your psychic abilities may shift items, change the passage of time, and change reality, you can test out your mutant abilities or hone your Jedi skills. You may use the same controls to move virtual things about your real room.

There is a way for travel apps to bring people to remote, vulnerable, or endangered places without putting further pressure on such places. The Burj Khalifa, the Empire State Building, the Eiffel Tower, etc., all in one perfect picture. as I sit here and watch the world pass me by.

Snagging a seat in an area with limited access will let you take in your surroundings. Envision yourself as a visitor who can view the astronauts at work on the International Space Station at any time.

Go to a theme park, either online or in real life, and enjoy the rides like the ferris wheel, the spooky "spook house" ride, the log flumes, and more.

If you'd like, you can sit in a train car the whole way along some of the world's most famous routes. This platform may host all of the content that is popular on European "slow tv" broadcasts.

The world around you will tremble like water while you sit motionless in the midst of a long time lapse, whether you're in a tiny town, a desert, a city, or the mountains.

So that you may relax and enjoy your vacation without any problems, it's a good idea to visit (or at least drive leisurely through) the cities and attractions you intend to visit before you go.

Join a photo safari in Africa and capture unforgettable moments by framing parts of the breathtaking scenery.

Art, Teaching, and Current Events

You can "sit at the feet" of a master and learn from their tutorials and classes, which give the impression of being a one-on-one experience. Imagine MasterClass with Margaret Atwood instead; she would be speaking to you from the comfort of your own home.

Get a feel for the news by seeing it happen as it happens. Picture yourself on "Two Minutes in a Village in Ukraine" or even in Congress through CSPAN.

Participating in re-enactments of significant events is a great way to teach children about the past.

Take a seat in pre-construction architectural models of rooms or reproduce the look of old structures in various eras.

Perch inside each panel and take in the sights as you read life-size, fully immersive 3D comics.

Explore different worlds in realistic, data-driven virtual landscapes. Lots of Mars 3D photos are at our disposal, and we may use them to explore real places that would otherwise be inaccessible to us.

Gain a feel for a place by expanding and contracting while remaining still. Visualise a scene as large as a planet, then scale it down to the size of an ant. Use your hand movements or the digital crown to control the perspective.

Use your hand movements to control a virtual symphony.

Personal

Creating a high-quality 3D recording of yourself allows you to gain a more unbiased understanding of how people perceive your movements, gestures, gait, and speech. This is the pinnacle of the "Record yourself giving a speech and critique the details" method.

To reconnect with your former self at a later date, record interactions with yourself and the people you care about. or commune with a departed loved one for a brief period of time. Just picture yourself chatting to a 3D recorder every day as you keep a journal. Watching these on an Apple Vision Pro will make it seem like you and someone from your past are having a face-to-face conversation.

You can learn a lot about a child's day by sitting in on their classroom or playground activities. (Another option is to sit at the kennel and observe the other animals in action.)

Create an immersive environment according to your specifications by combining 3D technology with Midjourney or another machine learning-based art programme, then voice-command your way through the process.

Just picture a home camera system that allows you to keep an eye on your house from anywhere in the world. It would be great for security reasons, sure, but it would also give you the freedom to "be home" even when you're far away.

Enhance the immersive and personal nature of telemedicine encounters with doctors and therapists.

Invoke a "Red Window" (similar to those found in Amsterdam's red light area) without leaving your house.

Get some rays while lounging on the beach.

From the here and now, you may take a virtual lift ride down into your own personal memory palace, where you can peruse an immersive gallery of your music, images, films, and more.

The Rethinking of Work

Think about the possibilities of remotely monitoring, troubleshooting, and controlling operations using a network of strategically positioned cameras. You may be in a warehouse, on the floor of a plant, or somewhere else in the world while you sit in your office.

Go on virtual tours of houses that let you sit in any room (or even outside on the patio or balcony), take in the details, and see how the lighting and acoustics change throughout the day by stepping back or forward in time.

Remotely operate a crane or other heavy machinery while maintaining an unobstructed view of the task at hand.

Sit inside a data visualisation that updates in real-time, and let the patterns, colours, and sounds lead you to mathematical relationships that would be hard to find in a spreadsheet.

Religion and Mental Health

Watch live feeds from houses of worship around the world as you participate in interactive worship experiences.

One way to increase understanding and foster compassion is to give viewers a taste of opposing viewpoints in contentious debates or polarising events.

To get a reading, use a Tarot deck, but instead of traditional cards, each one transforms into a fully immersive 3D scene with music. You can either let a narrator lead you through the reading or interpret it alone as you go from room to room (or card to card).

If you suffer from a fear of spiders, dentist chairs, or other potentially scary social settings, you can overcome your fear by practicing in a safe environment where you have more control.

Embrace the logic of your dreams even when you're awake with a dream simulator that subtly incorporates your music, images, and sounds into your room. Imagine a ghostly figure in the corner, a car passing "outside" while playing your favourite song, or a wall crumbling to reveal a long-lost memory.

With "virtual psychedelics," you can alter the appearance of your environment with distorted images, prismatic colours, and mysterious symbols.

Sales and Capital Raising

Check out potential purchases on a digital 'Lazy Susan' in the comfort of your own home... or to engage with well-known pieces of art housed in different museums.

Allow diners to virtually sample the menu items as they are brought to their tables. Provide clients of coffee shops with a live booth where they can sit and get some work done for the price of a couple of beverages.