Daily Dose Tech
Today
More Displays
Apple Vision Pro (M4) — image 1

Why we chose this

We've spent six weeks editing video, reviewing CAD, and pair-programming in Vision Pro. The thing that makes the M4 model worth covering isn't the spec sheet — it's that we stopped taking it off after 45 minutes. Comfort, not pixels, is what decides whether spatial computing actually replaces a monitor, and Apple finally got that part right.

The review

The second-generation Vision Pro is the one Apple should have shipped first. The headset is 22% lighter thanks to a redesigned magnesium frame and a smaller external battery, the M4 chip eliminates the rendering hiccups that plagued the M2 model under heavy multi-window loads, and the new micro-OLED panels push to 4K-per-eye at 120Hz without the persistence smear of the original. visionOS 3 is the bigger story: native windows for Final Cut, Logic Pro, and Xcode mean creative pros are finally a target audience rather than an aspirational one, and the spatial scene capture pipeline now exports directly into Premiere and DaVinci. The pass-through latency is down to 9ms, which crosses the threshold where you stop noticing it; the EyeSight front display has been retired (no one missed it). Battery life is still the elephant in the room — two and a half hours unplugged — but the new MagSafe-style swap means you can hot-swap without ending your session.

Discussion

Sign in to join the discussion.
  • No comments yet. Be the first.

Prices, availability, and stock status are pulled from retailer feeds and may change without notice. As an affiliate, we earn from qualifying purchases at no extra cost to you.

More displays