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We Finally Know More About Apple's New SiriÂ
Jason Henry/Bloomberg via Getty Images There’s been a lot of hype around Apple’s big AI Siri upgrade, especially considering it’s approaching two years overdue. Apple originally announced a slew of AI-powered features for the assistant back in 2024, then repeatedly delayed rolling them out due to development issues. Yet despite that, rumor has it that Apple’s ambitions for Siri have only grown,…
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Spatial Video Rollercoaster
There’s something slightly terrifying about technology finally catching up to the human imagination. For years we were told virtual reality was “the future,” and most of the time it ended up looking like blurry plastic goggles strapped to your forehead while a computer tried desperately to convince you a cube floating in empty space was revolutionary. Humanity spent billions reinventing disappointment.
But I have to admit, after using the Apple Vision Pro with the M5 chip, I finally understand what people meant all along.
As many of you who read my blogs already know, I own one, and recently I’ve been experimenting more and more with spatial video on YouTube. Today, though, I tried something different. I watched a spatial rollercoaster video.
Now, back in my younger years, you would have easily found me at places like Thorpe Park or Carowinds over in North Carolina during my travels in the United States. Rollercoasters were just part of the experience. The noise, the speed, the anticipation climbing that first hill before your stomach suddenly remembers gravity exists. Humans voluntarily paying money to be flung around like loose shopping bags in a hurricane. Remarkable species.
But I haven’t actually been on a rollercoaster in a very long time.
So when I loaded this spatial video through the Vision Pro, I expected it to be impressive. I did not expect my brain to completely buy into the illusion.
The moment the ride started, I genuinely felt like I was there. Not “watching” it. Experiencing it.
The depth perception is what changes everything. You’re no longer looking at a flat screen pretending to have immersion. The world actually surrounds you. As the coaster twisted and dropped, my body reacted instinctively. My stomach tightened. My balance shifted. I even caught myself leaning slightly into corners as though my brain had temporarily forgotten I was standing safely in my own room and not hanging upside down somewhere at 70 miles per hour.
After I took the Vision Pro off, I honestly felt a little wobbly for a minute. That’s how convincing it was.
And that’s the strange thing about this technology. The human mind is incredibly easy to fool when depth, motion, and sound all align correctly. We like to think we’re logical creatures, but apparently all it takes is a high-resolution headset and a simulated drop to send the nervous system into full “this is real” mode.
What fascinates me most is where this goes next.
Because if a rollercoaster video can create that kind of response already, imagine what spatial storytelling, education, documentaries, gaming, or even historical recreations will look like over the next decade. We are rapidly approaching a point where digital experiences stop feeling like “media” and start feeling like memory itself.
That is both exciting and slightly unsettling.
Still, I have to give credit where it’s due. Apple really has created something different here. The Vision Pro doesn’t feel like a gimmick to me anymore. It feels like the beginning of a completely different way humans are going to interact with content.
And honestly, the fact I had to sit down and write a blog afterwards because a virtual rollercoaster made me feel dizzy probably says everything you need to know.