If Apple is going to hide eye movements from apps, that sounds very much like an alignment tax situation—a headset that doesn’t do this is going to get a lot of capabilities advantages, so Apple will need to stay far ahead on other fronts continuously to overcome that.
If Apple is going to hide eye movements from apps, that sounds very much like an alignment tax situation—a headset that doesn’t do this is going to get a lot of capabilities advantages, so Apple will need to stay far ahead on other fronts continuously to overcome that.
I imagine this will relax over time, like the early iPhone didn’t allow any access for apps to the phonecall hardware.
That depends on whether users value privacy and might be scared about a device that has deep access or whether users have no problem with that.
When Apple spends its marketing dollars on speaking about how it should be scary when a device has access they might convince customers.