Does placing a Mac mini screen beside Kindle in Vision Pro improve study?
After learning that displaying the Mac mini screen in Vision Pro works quite well for development, there was one more thing I had wanted to sit down and try properly.
In addition to supported apps, Vision Pro has a folder called "Compatible Apps" where apps that are not specifically supported can still be opened as iPhone or iPad apps.
Apps shown there do not have any immersive features in particular, but they can launch as huge apps floating in the air, and you can freely lay them out or resize them.
Amazon's Kindle app is included there, and even without any special features, being able to display ebooks at a huge size is already valuable.
Thanks to the fairly high resolution, it is quite easy to read. It feels like reading a magazine enlarged to the size of a school research project board.
However, depending on the magazine, I felt that the scan resolution itself was too low to fully take advantage of the device. More than blur caused by the device, enlarging the ebook exposed the low original resolution of the digital book.
So I thought that if I opened a technical book in this enlarged Kindle app and placed it beside an equally huge Mac mini screen, studying would surely become much more productive.
But in reality, it did not improve that much. Both the screen and the app were too large, so the distance I had to move my neck increased, and because of the weight of Vision Pro I became fairly tired.
As a result, I experienced that for study purposes, displaying the Mac mini screen on a wide monitor and showing Kindle on an iPad works better.
I am sure that someday a device as light as XREAL-style glasses and as beautiful as Vision Pro will appear. When that time comes, I would like to try the same kind of setup again.