

Leaked document details Apple employee eye injuries, hints at Apple AR glasses – April 20, 2017Īpple began working on augmented reality glasses more than a year ago, sources say – March 27, 2017

Overnight, Apple will own the world’s largest augmented reality platform – June 7, 2017Īnalysts: Apple’s Corning investment hints at AR glasses and wireless charging tech – May 14, 2017Īpple awards Corning $200 million in first Advanced Manufacturing Fund investment – May 12, 2017 IKEA’s forthcoming Augmented Reality furniture app powered by Apple’s ARKit – June 19, 2017Īpple’s single most important WWDC 2017 announcement: ARKit – June 11, 2017Īpple CEO Cook discusses philosophy behind HomePod, ARKit’s potential market impact – June 6, 2017 UBS: Apple may eventually launch ‘iGlass’ smart glasses – June 20, 2017 Gene Munster: Expect Apple smart glasses in mid-2020 – June 27, 2017Īugmented Reality: Apple’s revolutionary offering leaves Google’s Android woefully behind – June 26, 2017Īpple’s AR is much closer to reality than Google’s – June 26, 2017 Gene Munster: Apple Glasses will soon outshine the iPhone – June 28, 2017 New app using Apple’s ARKit lets iPhone recreate 16 weeks of painstaking rotoscoping on the fly – July 27, 2017 We wonder if Google ever gets tired of standing there shellshocked and slack jawed as Apple takes off at light speed leaving them drooling at the starting line? - MacDailyNews, July 27, 2017 The sky’s the limit! - MacDailyNews, November 17, 2016 Imagine what could be done with AirPods coupled with a pair of Apple Specs. “Any AR app involving holding up an iPhone or iPad while not requiring much user manipulation directly on screen makes more sense for glasses.” “While some of the earliest examples are interesting, it is difficult to ignore how many of these examples make more sense for a pair of AR glasses,” Cybart writes. “Despite this limitation, the possibilities seem limitless.” Of course, that enhanced reality is constrained to what appears on our iPhone and iPad screens,” Cybart writes. Developers then use those eyes, and the technology already found with iPhones and iPads, to enhance our reality. “ARKit transforms iPhone and iPad cameras into smart eyes. It is no longer a question of if, but when, Apple will use AR to rethink glasses.” “While ARKit has taken the world by storm, the development platform is already making it clear that new form factors are needed to take full advantage of AR. Using fashion and luxury lessons learned from selling Apple Watch, Apple will enter the glasses industry and in the process launch its first product category designed specifically for the augmented reality (AR) era,” Neil Cybart writes for Above Avalon. “All of the pieces are coming together for Apple to sell glasses.
