ARVR

Microsoft may be working on its answer to the Vision Pro


Key Takeaways

  • Microsoft may be developing an Apple Vision Pro-style mixed reality headset, partnering with Samsung for components.
  • The headset will feature micro-OLED displays, offering brighter, high-resolution images.
  • Microsoft is likely to use an Android-based OS and may stream Windows apps from the cloud.



Since shutting down its own mixed reality platform, Microsoft has largely kept a healthy distance from XR. According to The Elec and some additional reporting from Windows Central, that may be changing soon. Microsoft appears to be developing an Apple Vision Pro-style mixed reality headset of its own.

Not only has the company reached an agreement with Samsung to make displays for future mixed-reality devices, it’s also reportedly working on a way to bring some of the traditional Windows experience to a head-mounted device that isn’t as powerful as a traditional PC. Microsoft was early to both augmented reality and mixed reality, but save for continuing to support the HoloLens 2 for enterprise customers and bringing some Windows apps to the Quest, it’s cooled to all-things metaverse and “extended reality,” instead focusing on AI. Whether that’s changing short-term remains to be seen, but there’s growing evidence it could.


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Microsoft’s mixed reality device won’t be entirely enterprise-focused

MicroOLEDs are part of the package

Apple Vision Pro-5

The Elec claims that Microsoft asked Samsung to make an unknown quantity of micro-OLEDs to help power a future mixed reality device. The high-density display is the same type that Apple used in the Vision Pro to achieve its nearly life-like image quality — all the better for watching video and playing games. Both Microsoft and Samsung are apparently early in the process of developing the new display — Apple’s were manufactured by Sony — and it could take a few more years before they appear in a product consumers can buy.


So if Microsoft is working on its own mixed reality device, there’s a long road ahead until it’s real. Still, the company has at least made gestures at what it could look like. Patents don’t necessarily imply intent, but Microsoft does have its own take on an EyeSight-style outer display and face tracking system, meant to fit on a headset. Of the parts of the Vision Pro it would make sense to copy, EyeSight seems the least important, but someone at Microsoft is at least thinking about mixed reality headsets.

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An Android operating system and streaming Windows apps

Microsoft Word, Excel, and PowerPoint in Apple Vision Pro

Microsoft / Pocket-lint


The software side of Microsoft’s future headset seems more clear. Windows Central writes that Microsoft is more likely to use Android rather than some reinterpreted version of Windows for a mixed reality device. Considering both Google and Samsung are collaborating on a mixed-reality version of Android, there will probably be a pretty good base for Microsoft to start from soon. The company has experience developing for Android, and by porting Windows 365 apps to Quest, it’s technically made mixed-reality experiences for an Android-based headset already.

Microsoft isn’t just interested in Android wrappers around its web-apps, though. According to Windows Central, the company is developing a project, codenamed “Williams Bay,” for running Windows apps in mixed reality environments by streaming them from the cloud. These would live in floating windows not unlike apps do on the Vision Pro, but could theoretically be expanded with 3D experiences, too.

Mixed reality is still unproven

We’re still years away from a future Microsoft headset, if one happens at all. In the meantime, the company plans on collaborating with Meta on an Xbox-branded Quest headset. If that ends up being more involved than slapping on a new logo and packing in an Xbox controller, we might start to get a better idea of what Microsoft has in mind.


The company has every reason to be cautious, though. Even if the Vision Pro is impressive from a technical perspective, and getting better with software updates, it didn’t set the world on fire. A high price tag and the lack of a clear use-case were big enough obstacles to keep Apple from influencing the average person’s mind about mixed reality. If that all changes a few years from now, it will be good that Microsoft waited, but there’s a possibility the company was right to get out of mixed reality when it did.



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