Source The Indian Express
A former Apple engineer has stepped into the spotlight with the launch of a groundbreaking extended-reality (XR) chip designed to take on Apple’s Vision Pro and reshape the future of spatial computing. The new chip, announced on Friday, promises major leaps in performance, power efficiency, and immersive capabilities—potentially setting the stage for a new wave of competition in the premium XR market.
According to the company behind the innovation, the chip has been built from the ground up to meet the demands of next-generation AR/VR devices. It features an advanced neural processing engine, enhanced graphics throughput, and ultra-low-latency streaming, enabling more realistic visuals and smoother interactions in mixed-reality environments.
The engineer, who reportedly spent years working on Apple’s silicon and display technologies, said the goal was to create an open and highly customizable XR platform for manufacturers. “Spatial computing shouldn’t be limited to closed ecosystems,” he noted during the launch, hinting at a vision for broader industry collaboration.
Industry analysts believe the move could intensify competition in a field currently dominated by Apple, Meta, and Qualcomm. While Apple’s Vision Pro has been praised for its cutting-edge hardware, critics point to its high cost and limited scale. A more accessible yet powerful XR chip, they say, could drive adoption among emerging headset makers and accelerate innovation.
The new chip is expected to be available to hardware partners by mid-2026, with several XR startups reportedly evaluating prototypes. If successful, it could mark a significant shift in the XR landscape—opening the door for lighter, more affordable, and more capable spatial-computing devices.
