The hardware also has "inside-out" tracking that uses the cameras to track the user's overall position, and infrared to follow your hand gestures.

We've asked Apple if it can confirm the deal, although it declined to comment when asked by TechCrunch. The company typically acknowledges a purchase with a boilerplate statement saying that it doesn't discuss its plans for newly-bought companies.

Provided the scoop is accurate, there are hints at what Apple might do with VRvana's technology. It would make the most sense for the AR headset rumored for 2020, which is said to be a fully self-contained device with its own operating system. Apple could offer AR and VR in a device where both would feel relatively natural: no lag, no ghostly visuals, no cords and no mandatory controllers. Tim Cook recently told the Independent that display quality was a significant barrier to good AR, and VRvana may have just what Apple needs to solve that problem and beyond.

Whatever the startup brings to the table, it's just one part of a larger puzzle. Apple recently bought SensoMotoric Instruments, which specializes in eye tracking in addition to AR/VR work, and has been snapping up other AR- and VR-related companies for years. If Apple goes forward with a headset at all, the finished product will likely bear only a passing resemblance to what you've seen before.