Macworld (USA)

What the Airpods Pro hint about Apple’s wearable AR philosophy

As Apple’s newest wearable device, the Airpods Pro may point to how Apple thinks about other wearable devices, like an AR headset.

- BY MICHAEL SIMON

Not that long ago, I spent a week wearing Apple’s new Airpods Pro ( go.macworld.com/ aipr). It wasn’t a week straight, I mean, but I wore them pretty consistent­ly in all the places I’d usually use one of my other myriad sets of headphones.

In looking at the Airpods Pro as a product, I think there are important things to be gleaned from the choices Apple made in its design—the kind of design choices that may lend insight into the way Apple is thinking about the wearables market.

Wearables, of course, was the market that was sharply up in the company’s most recent quarterly results, and thus is clearly a place that Apple is likely to be focusing some attention in the future ( go.macworld.com/fcus). And with rumors of Apple’s AR goggles/ glasses ( go.macworld.com/ arum) starting to coalesce around next year, the Airpods Pro might key us into how Apple is thinking about entering the still nascent (or perhaps non-existent) market for augmented reality headsets.

HOLISTIC AREA NETWORK

As I walked up the street the other day, listening to music on the Airpods Pro, they alerted me that my iphone was ringing. Without breaking my stride, I glanced at my Apple Watch, saw it was from an unknown number, and tapped the button to dismiss the call. All without pulling out my iphone.

It’s not the first time I’ve thought of Apple’s wearable devices as part of a “personal area network,” but the reality really hit home in that moment: a wristmount­ed display and sensor package in the form of the Apple Watch marries strikingly with the Airpods Pro, which deliver not only audio for entertainm­ent purposes, but notificati­ons as well.

An augmented reality heads-up display would seem to enhance this even further, helping complete this constellat­ion of devices that provides a variety of ways to interact with your technology. By treating this device more like an external display rather than a piece of self-sufficient hardware, à la Microsoft’s Hololens, it frees up the company to design a much lighter, simpler gadget—and if there’s one thing that we can all agree that Apple likes, it’s light, thin hardware.

TALK TO ME, SIRI

With IOS 13.2, Apple enabled a feature for Airpods that feels distinctly like an augmented reality capability: namely, the

ability for Siri to read messages to you as they arrive. Rather than just providing an audible alert chime, Siri will lower the volume of whatever audio is playing and then read the entire message. The virtual assistant will even describe emoji sent in messages, or relate the action from a tapback in imessage (“John laughed at your text”, for example).

This kind of seamless integratio­n could be a preview of what a pair of augmented reality glasses from Apple provides. Sure, such a device could simply barrage you with notificati­ons like your Apple Watch, but does anybody really want that? Instead, it will almost certainly allow you to choose specifical­ly which apps are allowed to provide you with informatio­n— and, in truest Apple fashion, it may not even let that many apps take advantage of your attention in its earliest versions.

And if you’re wondering how Siri would work in a visual environmen­t, look no further than the Siri watchface on the Apple Watch. Granted, it’s an interface that’s still in need of improvemen­t, but there’s something to be said for using machine learning to surface only the notificati­ons and data that you need when you need them.

OUTSIDE IN

One of the most interestin­g features of the Airpods Pro is its spectrum of isolation technologi­es, from noise-canceling mode to its Transparen­cy feature. Apple’s certainly not the first company to implement such capabiliti­es, but by designing them to be quickly toggled between, there’s a strong indication that the company expects these modes to be used—and switched between—frequently.

The Transparen­cy mode, which essentiall­y pipes in outside sound from the Airpods Pro’s mics, provides a way for users to interact with the world without having to remove the Airpods. Think of it like an augmented reality mode, where the noise canceling feature is more like a virtual reality that insulates you in a world where your audio is the more important factor. I found it handy, for example, when waiting for my name to be called at the coffee shop.

Could a similar set of features find their way into whatever heads-up display hardware Apple might be developing? I don’t find it hard to imagine an ability to toggle between an AR mode where you are getting informatio­n about the world around you and a “transparen­t” mode where the glasses focus more on the world itself. That’ll be particular­ly important if you’re ever expected to wear these devices while doing a task like, say, driving a car; some sort of Do Not Disturb mode would seem to be a must-have. Because in investing in a wearable heads-up display, Apple will have to walk a very fine line between “augmented” and “reality.” ■

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 ??  ?? Apple AR goggles could take its cues from Microsoft Hololens.
Apple AR goggles could take its cues from Microsoft Hololens.

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