
Apple Vision Pro
Any device. Any location. Including this one.
Sirona is a Chromium-native, cloud-native application — so it runs in Apple Vision Pro's browser the same way it runs on your laptop, your iPad, or a reading-room workstation. This isn't a headset reading workflow you need to adopt. It's a demonstration of the point: an architecture built for the browser runs anywhere a browser does — including whatever comes next.
How Sirona is Different
Your radiology platform runs wherever a browser does
Sirona is built entirely on web standards — Chromium-native rendering, WebGL for diagnostic visualization, and adaptive bitrate streaming from a global CDN. That means it can run wherever a modern browser runs — from desktop Chrome to new device categories like Vision Pro. No native app to build, no App Store approval to wait for, no feature gap between platforms. When Apple ships a new device, Sirona already works on it. That's not a roadmap item — it's an architectural fact.
Full platform, any screen
Because Sirona is browser-based, the same platform that runs on a desktop monitor also renders in Apple Vision Pro — no feature gaps, no native app. It's less a reading destination than a demonstration of what a browser-native architecture makes possible.
Browser-Native Rendering
Sirona runs in Chromium and Safari with WebGL-powered diagnostic visualization. No plugins, no downloads, no native app required.
Adaptive Bitrate Streaming
Netflix-style streaming from a global CDN adapts image quality to your bandwidth. Full diagnostic quality on any connection, any device.
Patented Eye Tracking
US Patent 11,164,045 B2 covers gaze-correlated ML for medical imaging. Vision Pro's built-in eye tracking creates new possibilities for gaze-aware workflows.
Infinite Workspace
Vision Pro offers unlimited virtual screen real estate. Arrange viewer, reporter, and worklist across your field of view however you want.
Voice + Gaze Interaction
Dictate reports while looking at findings. Sirona's multimodal AI understands clinical context — combine that with gaze data for smarter assistance.
Device-Agnostic Architecture
Laptop, iPad, workstation, Vision Pro — same login, same data, same workflow. Switch devices mid-session without losing context.
What spatial computing means for radiology
Today
Sirona already runs on Vision Pro
Open Safari on Apple Vision Pro, navigate to Sirona, and it loads — the real platform, not a mockup or a special build. The same code that runs in the reading room renders here, because it's all browser-native. To be explicit: Vision Pro is not cleared or validated for clinical reading, and we're not offering it for that — getting there would take a substantial validation effort. The point here is architectural: when the foundation is right, a brand-new device just works — nothing to port, nothing to install.
Full diagnostic viewer with MPR, MIP, and hanging protocols
AI-powered reporter with speech recognition and auto-populated templates
Intelligent worklist with study routing and prioritization
Diagnostic-quality WebGL rendering, built under Sirona's regulated, design-controlled SDLC
Patented
Eye tracking meets clinical intelligence
Sirona's patented technology (US 11,164,045 B2) integrates eye-tracking hardware with machine learning to correlate where a physician looks with what the image shows. On Vision Pro, this means the system can observe gaze patterns during a read, combine them with computer vision analysis of the study and clinical context from the report, and feed all of that into a multimodal workflow model. The result: an AI assistant that understands not just what you're saying, but what you're looking at and why it matters.
US Patent 11,164,045 B2: gaze-correlated ML for medical imaging
Combines eye tracking, computer vision, and clinical report context
Multimodal model assists with report section placement and findings
Built on Sirona's unified data model — images, reports, and clinical data connected
Architecture
Built once, runs everywhere — forever
Legacy PACS vendors build native desktop applications that take years to port to new platforms. Sirona builds for the browser. When Apple shipped Vision Pro, Sirona worked on it immediately — no development sprint, no beta program, no waiting. The same will be true for whatever device comes next. Cloud-native architecture means your practice can adopt new hardware the day it ships, not months after your PACS vendor decides to support it.
Chromium and Safari compatible — runs on any modern browser engine
WebGL diagnostic rendering works across all platforms
Cloud infrastructure handles all compute — device just needs a screen and a connection
No native app store dependency or approval cycles
Display
The same rendering pipeline, on new hardware
Vision Pro's micro-OLED panels deliver more pixels per eye than a 4K television, with foveated rendering that prioritizes detail where the wearer is looking. Sirona's WebGL pipeline is the same one that runs on a desktop or tablet — it doesn't change to accommodate the device. That's the real story: the rendering behaves consistently wherever a browser runs. Whether anyone chooses to work in a headset is up to them; the architecture simply doesn't have to be rebuilt for the hardware.
Foveated rendering routes GPU budget to the gaze region in real time
WebGL diagnostic pipeline parity with desktop and tablet sessions
Adaptive streaming holds quality through bandwidth fluctuation
Color-accurate, window/level controls preserved across the spatial workspace
Platform reach
0
installs required on any device
Patented
gaze-correlated ML for medical imaging (US 11,164,045 B2)
Cloud-native
high availability on every device
1
platform for every screen — desktop to Vision Pro
Work from anywhere means anywhere
Demo: Sirona in Vision Pro
Watch as RadOS comes to life in the Apple Vision Pro environment hours after its initial launch. As a website, Sirona just works: at your workstation, on your phone, or in virtual reality.
FAQs
Does Sirona have a native Apple Vision Pro app?
Does Sirona render the same on Vision Pro as on a workstation?
What patents does Sirona hold related to spatial computing?
How does eye tracking improve radiology workflows?
Can I switch between Vision Pro and a regular monitor mid-session?
Does this work with other XR or spatial computing devices?