 The nurse using an Apple Vision Pro during spinal surgery to identify instruments and processes as a double check on accuracy. A month ago, Dr. Robert Masson, who is a neurosurgeon here in the US, brought an Apple Vision Pro into his operating room with similar effect. Surgeons using something called Strikers Mako Smart Robotics to assist in a knee surgery were using Strikers app built for the Apple Vision Pro now and that let surgeons visualize and review the surgery before they performed it. Apple needs this to be seen as an entertainment device by the user at home who might wanna pick it up if they have disposable income for it, right? And be like, okay, I'm gonna watch movies on it. I'm gonna maybe do some fun things on it. But then they need the medical practitioners to look at it as a training device. They need other enterprises to look at it as a productivity device, as a business device, as a serious device.