Magic Leap 2 will be available to the general public in September starting at $3,299 with a 1-year “limited” warranty.
That’s the base price for the ultra-high-end Magic Leap 2 AR headset, with prices increasing from there for a “Developer Pro” edition that includes “access to developer tools, sample projects, enterprise-grade features, and monthly early development releases.” and testing purposes, starts at MSRP $4,099 and includes a 1-year limited warranty.” There is also the “Enterprise” edition which starts at approximately $5K per headset “for environments requiring flexible, large-scale IT deployments and robust business features . Includes quarterly software releases that can be fully managed through enterprise UEM/MDM solutions. Comes with 2 years of access to business features and updates and starts at MSRP $4,999 and includes a comprehensive 2year limited warranty.”
we have our first look carefully at the specifications for Magic Leap 2 earlier this year and they proposed a best-in-class AR headset, with an included dynamic dimming function that blocks outside light to make virtual objects more visible in a wider range of lighting conditions. Given the recent restructuring in the division of Microsoft that produces HoloLens 2 . has delivered and reports suggesting that sustained efforts to build AR glasses on places like Meta to be “late and they’re expensive”, we’re excited to see how far Magic Leap can get with its technology in the coming years. The first Magic Leap headset that shipped in 2018 cost about $2,300 with a design that included processing in a wired processing puck. on your body, and Magic Leap 2 continues that design.
The official specs as stated by the company for Magic Leap 2 claim “up to” 70° diagonal field of view” with a refresh rate of 120 Hz. Here are the full specs listed on Magic Leap’s site:
- Weight: 260g
- Camera: RGB camera with 12.6 megapixel autofocus, 4k at 30 fps or 1920 x 1080 at 60 fps video
- Memory/Storage: 256GB
- Display volume: 37cm to infinity
- CPU: AMD 7nm Quad-core Zen2 X86 core (8 threads), 14 core CVIP engine, up to 3.92 GHz max with 512kB L2 per core, 4MB total L3 cache
- GPU: AMD GFX10.2: 1SE 1SA 4 WGP (8 CUs) 2RB+, 1MB L2 cache 964MHz / 1.8GHz max
- Display: 1440 x 1760px resolution, 20 to 2000 nits brightness
- Spatial audio: built-in stereo speakers
- Sensors: 3 Wider FoV World Cameras, Depth Camera, RGB Camera, Ambient Light Sensor, 4x Eye Tracking Cameras
- Inertial sensors: 4x IMU, 3-axis accelerometer and gyroscope, 2x 3-axis magnetometer, 2x altimeter
- Battery: 3.5 hours continuous use, 7 hours sleep mode
- Security • WPA3AMD Platform Security processor, TMR, Security gates between x86 and CVIP
Magic Jump 2 will be available on September 30, 2022 and the company promises support for “OpenXR and WebXR are coming in 2H 2022.”