@@nitromusik9275 this isn’t correct, I have had a lot of people comment to me that didn’t even know this feature existed, they have just been in environments watching on the initial window that opens for appletv, safari or Disney+ so this is for those people and clearly not for you.
@@alextench yes so many people don’t know the difference between just watching a video in a normal window in a immersive environment verses toggling that environment button in the top left corner of the window…. Which gives you a massive screen way out over the water. As promised by Apple.
I have inserts for the lens and when I watch a movie with bright lights, I get glare from the inserts. When in an environment with that water at the bottom in cinema mode, that glare is greatly reduced. That is an incredible feature and apple needs to make such environments available everywhere there is video content. For me, watching movies is a HUGE reason to own AVP. I don't use my projector/screen unless I want to watch something with someone.
@@rickschlueter hopefully some point after Mondays Apple Keynote. I really hope so as it hasn’t featured in any of the VisionOS 2 Betas so far. I think it’s because it requires the MacOS to be on Sequoia which hasn’t launched yet.
@@leonbis2000 you clearly explore better than a lot of novices that use Vision Pro as their first HMD. So I’m glad you love it but others genuinely don’t know about it.
@@carlosdominguez3108 I personally think that the opportunity to make a broad and informative piece of content over throw away TikTok style content is better. You may disagree but you don’t have to watch it.
The passion is great. My point is, most people are going to simply exit out the video. I gave you a chance cuz you're a small channel but 4 minutes in you're still talking about the problem with no indication when you're about to show us the solution. Keep doing it this way if you'd like, but you'll get little to no views. People like long form content when it comes to intellectual discussion, not a 37 minute video about toggling on one setting.
@@carlosdominguez3108 see I have to disagree. I have grown a channel to over a 1000 subscriber in less than a month with decent analytics. So I think it’s a very subjective thing to talk about. People have the ability to scrub if they don’t want the exposition first. I think the other thing you have failed to realize is that, what you like isn’t what other may like and RU-vid have targets for new channels to hit with watch hours. I can’t make 2 minute content and expect it to ever reach those targets so I have to take more risk with longer form. Maybe when I have hit those targets I can streamline. There are tutorials for everything on RU-vid, long and short versions of the same thing, just depends and your taste in content and attention span. Sorry you didn’t like it. I’m sure there are better content creators out there for you to watch that are more straight to the point.
To me it looks smaller it’s just an effect that’s it’s overlapping a further away background scenery making it look bigger from a far away perspective, to me it’s looks its biggest when it’s pulled as close as apple allows and that’s still not enough
@@rickysalminen3340 see I don’t think about in a VR space. I see it from a real world perspective, if you stood close to a big TV or small projector screen, it could look bigger than a Cinema screen at distance but you know for a fact the cinema screen is vastly larger than either of those, so that’s my view on it and I genuinely get that feeling when watching in the AVP in theatre mode in mount hood or Lake Vlangra
@@NeilLavitt absolutely is and really gives you the movie theater feel without anyone making noise, on their phone or walking in front of you for a pee break haha! I love it
Nope! It’s not a hidden feature and it took 13.25 for you to share it. While I appreciate you making the video I played this video on 2x and it still was very long to get to something that has been there as you mentioned in VOS1 and now VOS2 beta.
thanks for your feedback, i have had some say your opinion and others like what i do. i've leave it up to you to if you would like to view more, currently im happy with the content im making. thank for watching on 2X
@@homi1336 ok it’s not well sign posted for the less savvy. Hidden is maybe too strong but it’s definitely not something people are guided too straight away
@@HolzmannMedia if you watch my video, I made mention of this feature being known by the experienced Vision Pro user but a lot don’t and I have had a load of questions asked about max screen size and having the best video experiences in AVP, so this of for them really.
@@HolzmannMedia I’m confused, you just said you use the feature of this video all the time? Now you said you haven’t used it. The hidden feature is the environment tab in the top left of the video window. This will allow you to have a much larger static screen out of the water on Mount Hood and other environments. This is different to what you have in a environment without pressing that button
@@Thomas_Voland no it doesn’t. If you struggled with perspective you need to go and have your eyes checked. Do you put you TV up to your face and say it’s bigger!
I agree that it makes the screen smaller! I think the Vision Experiment guy needs it explained by Father Ted! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-vh5kZ4uIUC0.html
@@DaviesKirk you are wrong, you don’t clearly understand perspective. Do you think your TV a bigger by standing closer to it? No obviously…but if you do, I now understand why you think the screen is smaller in AVP
@@DaviesKirk look at the size of the screen to the trees and lake… lake must be the size of a puddle and the tree’s must be micro trees in your understanding. You are welcome!
@@bushgreen260 no sadly, it’s set the dimensions of the content you are watching and static out over the water (for mount hood) but you feel its height and know you are getting a good amount of screen real estate
That's interesting. I don't know that this feature would be useful for me at all since I'm visually impaired and making the actual screen smaller (well, further I guess) makes it harder to see, but it still an interesting concequence of this feature. Though I will comment that if the feature being presented on a video is first being shown half way through the video, it feels like there's a lot of rambling going on. Good video, but please more strait to the point. ^^