#Luxor evolved online mac#
It's possible the Apple headset will still likely have to connect to an iPhone or Mac computer, but that a future iteration of the device may not.Īccording to another recent report from Digitimes, citing supply chain sources, the product will cost as much $2,000 (£1,500). In October, Kuo said Apple's upcoming headset will also be wireless and use Wi-Fi 6E, the newest version of Wi-Fi, allowing it faster speeds and a higher number of connections. However, Kuo predicted in June that the will launch in spring 2022, so it seems the timeframe has been pushed back – and could be pushed back again.Īt the time, Kuo said it will cost headset that could cost $1,000 (£750), although another report has put its price-tag at twice this amount. Kuo, an analyst at TF International Securities in Hong Kong, is known for garnering information on Apple's plans from his contacts within the company's Asian supply chain. MailOnline has contacted Apple for comment regarding whether Kuo's claims, although he has previously been described by some news outlets as 'the most accurate Apple analyst in the world'.Īpple Track, a blog that keeps tabs on Apple rumours 'and the sources that publish them, currently gives Kuo an accuracy rating of 75.9 per cent. Kuo also said the headset will be able to support virtual reality (VR) as well as AR, thanks to a pair of 4K Micro OLED displays from Sony.ĪR layers computer-generated images on top of an existing reality – Pokémon Go being a famous example – while VR is wholly virtual. Computing power of this sensor will be 'significantly higher' than that of the iPhone, however. The second, lower-end processor, meanwhile, will manage the 'sensor-related aspects' of the headset. However, Kuo said the processor in the headset would have 'similar computing power', suggesting it's not exactly the same chip.
'The higher-end processor will have similar computing power as the M1 for Mac, whereas the lower-end processor will be in charge of sensor-related computing.'Īpple had previously relied on Intel chips for its Macs, but these have been ditched in favour of M1, which was revealed by the tech giant last November.
'We predict that Apple's AR headset to be launched in 4Q22 will be equipped with two processors,' Kuo says in the note, as quoted by MacRumors.