Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

No Rift support for Mac until ‘Apple releases a good computer,’ says Oculus founder

Add as a preferred source on Google

When will the Oculus Rift offer Mac support? When Apple releases a “good computer,” Oculus founder Palmer Luckey says.

“That is up to Apple. If they ever release a good computer we will do it,” said Luckey, adding that the problem is graphics capability. “It just boils down to the fact that Apple doesn’t prioritize high-end GPUs. You can buy a $6,000 Mac Pro with the top of the line AMD FirePro D700s, and it still doesn’t match our recommended spec.”

Recommended Videos

Luckey laid down that Apple burn in a video interview, shown above, with GamerHubTV. The complaint: even the highest-end Apple computers aren’t focused enough on graphics power to run most Rift-compatible software.

“Even if we can support it on the software side, there’s just no audience of people that can run the vast majority of software out there,” said Luckey.

If the specs problem changes, and Apple puts out computers with more gaming capability, Oculus will look into adding Mac compatibility.

“If [Apple] prioritizes higher-end GPUs like they used to for awhile back in the day I think we’d love to support Mac,” Luckey clarified.

Luckey went through a few other topics during the interview, including the lack of a front-facing camera on the Rift.

“Technology just isn’t at the point where you can do good pass-through in any kind of reliable sense,” said Luckey, adding that the cost increase and ergonomic problems are also a factor.

Talking about the $600 price point of the Rift itself, Luckey said that the device is already sold out so apparently price isn’t too much of an issue. But he also said things will change eventually.

“Over time cost is going to go down, quality is going to go up,” said Luckey.

Finally, when asked if he was worried about the other players entering the VR space, Luckey said if anything it was a reason for optimism.

“If we were the only people in this industry, that would probably be a scary indicator,” said Luckey. “The fact that there’s other people jumping into the VR space shows that VR is something people believe in.”

The Oculus Rift has been available as a developer kit for years now, but the consumer version is now available for pre-order. Devices are expected to ship by July 2016.

Justin Pot
Justin's always had a passion for trying out new software, asking questions, and explaining things – tech journalism is the…
A harmless-looking ChatGPT prompt opened the door to gruesome AI images
The findings show how image safety systems can fail without explicit graphic instructions.
ChatGPT

A harmless-looking ChatGPT prompt pushed the latest public version of ChatGPT into generating sexualized and violent images, AI security researchers told the BBC. The finding puts new pressure on OpenAI’s image safety systems, since the request wasn’t described as plainly graphic.

Mindgard, a British AI security startup, said it reached the results by altering a widely shared instruction that had been used for comedy. OpenAI added safeguards after the BBC contacted it, but the researchers said small wording changes still produced concerning images.

Read more
ChatGPT’s new Scheduled page puts all your automated tasks in one place
The update also brings smarter monitoring tasks that can search the web and connected apps automatically.
ChatGPT Scheduled hub featured

OpenAI is rolling out a dedicated home for ChatGPT's scheduled tasks, giving users a single place to view, manage, and monitor automated work. The new Scheduled page can be accessed from the sidebar, and it shows all active tasks alongside their next run times.

What the update adds

Read more
Claude Design will now stick to your brand guidelines instead of generic AI mockups
Claude Design connects to Adobe, Canva, and more tools now.
Claude desktop.

Anthropic just rolled out a big update to Claude Design, its AI-powered visual creation tool that first launched in research preview. The tool already lets you turn a simple prompt into prototypes, decks, and marketing assets, and now it does even more.

The latest update brings design system support, a smooth handoff to Claude Code, a redesigned editor, and a bunch of new app integrations.

Read more