HomePod software has suggest that iphone 8 device’s facial-recognition system
will work when phone is flat and be able to mute notifications when it detects
user is looking.
More details have been revealed about the highly anticipated
iPhone 8 by software leaks from Apple, including the device’s ability to mute
notifications when it detects you are looking at it.
While the name and precise release date of the next big
change to the Apple’s iPhone, dubbed the D22 iPhone, is unknown the leaked
software for Apple’s upcoming HomePod smart speaker has already revealed what
the phone will look like, that it will have face recognition and other details.
Now further analysis by Brazilian Apple site iHelp BR has
found suggestions that the iPhone 8’s face recognition feature is designed to
work when the smartphone is flat on a desk and doesn’t require the device to be
held up at head height to unlock the phone with a face.
One of the criticisms of current face and iris recognition
technology, as employed by the Samsung Galaxy S8 and Microsoft’s Windows
Hello-enabled Surface computers, is that it must be either brought up to eye
level to work or must be angled in such a way that it can clearly see the whole
of your face.
Should Apple have designed a way to allow the infra-red
based face recognition system to work at a much wider angle, including flat on
a desk, it could go some way to alleviating the issues plaguing current
iterations of the technology.
Developer Guilherme Rambo found suggestions in the HomePod
code that point to the iPhone’s facial recognition system being able to detect
more than one face. While being able to register multiple digits is logical for
a fingerprint scanner-based system, for using both hands and multiple fingers
in different scenarios for unlocking the phone, the same cannot be said of faces
for a single-user device such as an iPhone.
It might be used to allow multiple people to unlock an
iPhone, perhaps with limited access, or to be able to register a face with and
without glasses.
Higher quality slow-motion video
Apple was one of the first to make slow-motion video capture
a standard feature on a smartphone, but while the frame rate has been doubled
over the years, the resolution of the video captured at 240 frames per second
has been fixed at the relatively small 720p.
Rambo found suggestions that the next version of the iPhone
would be capable of capturing high-speed slow motion video at a full 1080p
resolution using both the back and the front-facing cameras. A step up to 1080p
should make for a noticeable improvement in quality.
The iPhone will mute notifications when you’re looking at it
Rambo also found suggestions in the code of the HomePod
firmware that the next iPhone will be able to recognise when you’re looking at
it and mute notifications. The expectation is that the IR-scanning system used
for facial recognition will be watching the user and detecting when they look
at the phone. Samsung has already created a feature called smart stay, which
uses a smartphone’s front-facing camera to track eye attention and keep the
screen lit while a user is looking at it.
Apple’s system could use a similar technique, tracking eye
position to avoid audible alerts when the phone is actively being looked at but
not physically interacted with.
Apple is expected to announce new iPhones at its yearly
September event. We’ll find out exactly what it looks like and what it will be
called then.
Apple declined to comment.
Culled From Guardian
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