Vision Pro is an amazing product looking for a purpose and a market. I've opined that it's the 128K Mac of the 2020s -- an expensive toy of very little practical use on its own, that portends a revolution in computing, later versions of which really do change everything. I don't know if that's true anymore. It isn't the 1980s, and initiatives that don't make money over their first year or so tend to get axed. There's no Jobs to push the "vision thing" (no pun intended) anymore.
The Vision/Vision Pro product was also years behind schedule, based on original expectations, and some people feel that they had to launch something so that's why we got what we got.
We have to have thin glasses or contacts. No one wants to wear a bulky helmet thing. Until that happens it will forever be a hardcore enterprise or niche consumer product
I would say it's more like the internal Xerox machines that were built in the mid-1970s at PARC. Most people have no idea how to work with those machines. By the time the 128K Mac came out, people understood what a GUI interface was and knew how to use them - it's just that the Mac in particular was limited by it's hardware.