Apple's Next iPhone: Facial-Recognition, All-Screen Design (theguardian.com) 140
Apple may have just revealed the features you could expect in the next iPhone. Last week, the company released the firmware of the HomePod, a smart speaker which it will begin selling later this year. In the code, the company has accidentally spilled some features about at least one of the iPhone models. Developer Steve Troughton-Smith looked at the code to find that the next iPhone is going to feature facial recognition and a brand new "bezel-less" design. From a report: The near bezel-less design has long been expected, with leaks and rumours suggesting that Apple was following Samsung's design moves with the Galaxy S8 and producing a smartphone that resembles Android-creator Andy Rubin's upcoming Essential phone. Apple is not the first company to use IR-based face recognition as a means of unlocking devices and authenticating users. Microsoft's Windows Hello IR-based face recognition is found in its Surface line as well as Windows 10 computers from other manufacturers.
Great (Score:1)
No bezel means you have to have zero-fat fingers to hold it.
Facial recognition means yet another big brother feature.
I'm out.
What's the best dumb flip-phone these days? I don't even want texting or a camera. Just a flip phone with good audio quality and a battery that lasts a week or more.
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This post isn't called 'what phone should I buy?'
No one cares what phone you have.
Quoth the GP:
Re:Great (Score:4, Insightful)
You had no idea that the company that built its fortune on tracking everything you do online was tracking you via a GPS receiver in your pocket? You have to be either the most naive or the most stupid person to grace the planet in the past 123423 millennia.
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You must be a blast at parties
Re:Great (Score:4, Informative)
What's the best dumb flip-phone these days?
Tin can and string.
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You must be a CenturyLink customer.
Worse, a Sprint customer for 20+ years.
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Re:Great (Score:4, Insightful)
Apple already addressed the holding problem in iOS 11. Jobs may be dead, but that doesn't mean all the engineers and designers are drooling idiots. That's reserved for slashdot.
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Apple already addressed the holding problem in iOS 11. Jobs may be dead, but that doesn't mean all the engineers and designers are drooling idiots. That's reserved for slashdot.
Ya, but essentially, Jobs was the QA guy who had the power to tell the engineers and designers that something didn't ship till every little thing was fixed. I doubt their current QA manager has that power.
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No bezel means you have to have zero-fat fingers to hold it.
You are right but this is a UI problem, not a hardware problem;
It is totally possible to make the edges of the screen inactive. Call it a virtual bezel if you want.
Or better : make the edges active only if the action crosses the inner area. This way it will protect you from accidental input but you can use the edges for swipes and drag-and-drop.
I don't know how it would do in practice but when it comes to touch-based interaction, Apple is unmatched, so I am confident they will do it right. And I am not an A
Re: Great (Score:1)
Looks like apple (Score:1, Insightful)
has been putting in quite of bit of overtime copying other companies.
People don't buy iPhones because they're the first (Score:5, Insightful)
Those prefacing the iPhone 8's arrival with "X already done here, Y already done there" are once again missing the point.
People don't buy Apple products because they're the first to market with an insignificant number of less than excellently integrated features.
People buy Apple products because when it's implemented in an iPhone/Mac/other it's done _well_ and can be bought in the tens of millions.
The original iPod was mocked upon it's release for not having the "essential features" some geeks considered essential yet sold in the hundreds of millions.
Same with the iPhone.
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The original iPod was mocked upon it's release for not having the "essential features" some geeks considered essential yet sold in the hundreds of millions.
Same with the iPhone.
Good for Apple and their shareholders back then.
I'm still glad I never bought and iPod or any other overpriced MP3 player on which I can't just drag and drop files and play them.
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Drag and drop files? You're still managing your music as files? Ever heard of metadata and playlists? You don't know what you're missing.
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You are clearly misinformed if you think not being able to drag and drop files is a requirement to be able to support playlists.
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metadata in playlists implies "smart" playlists, i.e. SQL style.
I can make a playlist of all 1980's pop songs not including Weird Al Yankovic without touching any file.
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still, I don't see why your MP3 player must refuse to play a file drag and dropped to its file system to support that feature.
Re: People don't buy iPhones because they're the f (Score:1)
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I really wish I could! Yesterday, I was transfering music b/w iTunes on my PC, and my iPod nano. It was a pain: maybe it's easier on a mac. But when I wanted to delete certain songs from the iPod, I couldn't: I had to 'delete' it from my laptop, and then sync the iPod to the laptop w/o transfering the songs I wanted to delete, and only in that convoluted way did it work. Say what you will about Windows, but when I want to transfer songs from my laptop to my Lumia, all I have to do is drag and drop file
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Simply switch iTunes/your iPod to "manage songs and playlists manually". Then you can pick the songs, playlists and smart playlists that you want synced one by one.
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Re: People don't buy iPhones because they're the f (Score:1)
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Apple is far from the only "Mp3 media player company" that required some sort of music manager to update the library. It used to drive me nuts too, because I just wanted to drag and drop my MP3s and go.
But, judging from all of the cars that I've driven that support USB memory sticks or SD card media, I grudgingly must admit they were probably right in requiring that a database be kept up to date by an update tool rather than by the player itself. I've yet to see even a modern car "flat file" MP3 player t
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Sounds like a "let's make it crap for the masses for the special case where a DB is useful".
How about letting the users choose whether they want to use iTunes to manage their library or not?
My car plays MP3 on USB just fine. No, I don't have thousands of files on it. But I wouldn't want to have to click "next" thousands of times either.
Then, when people ask how to get their large library to work well, the answer is almost always to connect an iPod to the USB port
If you do that, chances are it won't play since the host needs to speak Apple's proprietary protocol. And no, the solution isn't for all the world to bend over and support Ap
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I tend to agree.
For me the question is though: for how much longer?
You refer to the first iPhone. And rightfully so. It was a complete game changer. Even to the extend that some didn't even get it.
But most of us saw it for what it was: the future.
But now the iPhone seems to be locked in a feature race with other phone makers *cough*Samsung*cough*. A race it seems to be slowly losing. Until now the iPhone users have been very loyal though and are dutifully paying the premium prices (although the top of the l
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Or would it just mean that the whole update cycle with people standing in line for the privilege of spending â1.000 is over for everyone?
That's been over for me for some time. My current phone is a Samsung Galaxy S5. I don't see any real need to update it anytime soon. I can swap batteries, have a 128GB SD card in it and it does more than I need it to. I would probably still have my S3 if it hadn't started having issues.
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I think its basically going to follow the PC pricing trajectory, but more slowly, as the phone makers control the entire form factor and user interface because its a contained product in a single package, so they can tweak any element of it endlessly and string out the perception of difference longer.
But long term, I think phones are already hitting the point of maximum useful utility and that the past couple of years has been nothing more than nibbling at the margins to create the perception of change. Mo
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How long they can go from success to success is indeed Apple's biggest challenge and nobody knows how long it can continue. Yet their % of repeat customers is still by far the highest in the industry (absent some irrelevant niche players) & it isn't because they're a "visionary product" but because people prefer how they work/how they're supported.
I've got both an iPhone & an Android phone & justify the iPhone through it's better integrated design & security features & longer lasting lif
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because when it's implemented in an iPhone/Mac/other it's done _well_
bahhahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha. Look I ahhahahahahahahh oh man I can't even hahahahhahahahahah respond to that hahahahhahahahaha.
+5 funny man. I can't wait to see what a bezel less screen done right looks like. hahahahaha. I guess it will fold space time on itself using it's reality distortion powers hahahah.
Oh man, I feel like buying tickets to your show.
Re:People don't buy iPhones because they're the fi (Score:4, Insightful)
Apple sees your teeny tiny titters and laughs and laughs and laughs on their way to selling to people who do indeed care about design in 10s of millions of devices. But of course, for you that's just a sign of how deluded _they_ must be given that _they_ do not agree with _you_.
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Oh you hit the nail on the head while completely missing the point.
Apple sells designs.
They do not sell quality / perfectly working / latest technology. Just designs.
They used to do a lot of those others, but those days disappeared when someone prominent thought that herbal tea was better than getting their cancer treated.
Re: People don't buy iPhones because they're the f (Score:1)
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There was no point in February when any, much less all, iDevices owned by myself, my friends, nor my company because unusable. When you make up shit just to bash a company, you show yourself to be a fucked-up pile of shit who doesn't have even a single redeeming quality. Beyond your value as fertilizer, of course.
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Literally millions of people manage to unbox, set up, and use iOS devices every month. Don't you have to wonder what it is that these millions of people figure out without any problem whatsoever that still eludes you?
Custom power cable? It's a regular power cable with a plastic trim ring on it. The horror! Any standard 3-conductor AC power cable from any PC power supply that shipped in the last 15+ years will fit and work, as long as it isn't actually some proprietary horseshit. What an inconvenience,
That's not why people are pointing it out (Score:2)
The argument by most
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Apple didn't attempt to "halt progress", they sued Samsung because Samsung took the easy way out and cloned the iPhone instead of coming up with their own minimally self inspired designs. Samsung even baldly admitted that they cloned the iPhone as closely as possible during discovery!
Now that Samsung & others have moved on to designs that aren't mere clones of iPhones (and 'inspiration" is a 2-way street), wow, hey, no more suits - except for the occasional Chinese clone that once again copies blindly.
I
Re: That's not why people are pointing it out (Score:1)
Re: That's not why people are pointing it out (Score:1)
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Those prefacing the iPhone 8's arrival with "X already done here, Y already done there" are once again missing the point.
People don't buy Apple products because they're the first to market with an insignificant number of less than excellently integrated features.
Those who think people are buying the Iphone because it has excellently integrated features couldn't have missed the point further if they were facing in the completely wrong direction and the point was in another country altogether.
In 2012, it was revealed that 4 out of every 5 Iphone purchases was made by someone who previously owned an Iphone. I'm willing to bet that statistic would now be closer to 19 out of every 20.
People are buying the iphone because they are emotionally attached, financially i
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So you're not okay with it recognizing your face, which is probably in dozens of hundred of pictures already on the phone, but you're okay with it storing your fingerprints and using them for access?
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Err...I don't give it my fingerprint either.
Passcode still work just fine.
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Well, I don't know...I could go all conspiracy theory and come up with some ideas about what government (state and federal) entities and private corps could do with them, but I think the best thing is to NOT give them the chance, and then....I don't have to worry about it, now do I?
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No need for a company, which would turn them over to govt if requested...hence, no need of the government to have this information if you've done nothing wrong.
I would posit, that the better question is...what would they need it for?
But anyway, I don't use that feature, and I"d not use facial recognition either....passcodes work just fine still.
Re: Facial Recognition Is Why I Bought an iPhone 7 (Score:2)
Don't they 'just' store a hash that is generated on setup?
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I recently bought an iPhone 6S, since I still use my headphone jack for all my headphones, and to plug into my car stereo. This may be my last iPhone if they don't stop this drive toward stupid design obsessions that leave out actual user needs and desires.
Re: Facial Recognition Is Why I Bought an iPhone 7 (Score:2)
Hey, I recently bought a (refurbished) 6S as well!
But, for me, another part of the decision was along the lines of my thinking when I buy a car anymore... why spend so much on something that's going to lose 20-30 percent of it's value the moment you drive it off the lot, when a 2-3 year old car still has all the features you care about?
(I'm thinking about cars a lot lately - I'm probably gonna retire the Escort soon *sniff*)
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I like iPhones (I know, unpopulat opinion on Slashdot). I bought an iPhone 7 specifically because I'm not going to buy a phone with facial recognition built in at the lowest levels. This will probably be my last iPhone.
I think facial recognition is already there. My photos library had a ton of pictures of me & my relatives, and the Photo app bunched all the similar ones together - those of me, my son, my sister, niece & so on - and prompted me to identify who is who. Really scary! The other thing both Microsoft and Apple do - create new albums whenever they feel like it.
But this will probably be my last iPhone as well. Unlike previous iDevices I have, I got this one w/ 128GB of storage, so I'm unlikely to r
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Steve Jobs died.... The iOS interface has become increasingly cluttered and clunky too. Unfortunately, there is no substitute for the demanding, exacting mind of Steve Jobs.
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There is, but it's not Tim Cook. The substitute, IMHO, should have been Scott Forstall but he was fired from the company. Just watch him in past Keynote videos.
Now we have an industrial designer in charge of software interfaces. And we have the mess we have today: buttons with no outlines, pastel colours, folder tags only visible by people with 20/20 vision, thin fonts which are hard to read on retina displays and an unread
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Are you saying that they're likely not to use some type of extra-visible patterning, like Windows Hello, which cannot be unlocked with a photo?
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Can't wait until we see governments unlocking phones with a photograph of you, now, if this turns out to be true.
Can't wait until someone starts a collection of faces, removed from the fronts of the skulls of former iphone owners. Sure, he could remove the entire head, but a face folds up neatly to fit in your pocket.
And you thought removing fingers was bad?
I'd trade it all (Score:5, Insightful)
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You forgot SD/microSD slot and regular microUSB connector.
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So? Apple developers can't solve the removable media problem? How did they do with floppies, CDs, USB thumb drives on Macs?
Re: I'd trade it all (Score:1)
Already has a removable battery (Score:2, Troll)
I bought my removable battery from Anker, and I take it (and its short tethering cable) along with me on my 1% of excursions that aren't near an electrical outlet. My removable battery is so clever that it can also charge my watch, tablet, and my buddy's Android. It also has the amazing design characteristic of adding zero additional hardware to my phone in the 99% of trips when I don't want or need it. How cool is that!
I'm meh on the headphone socket. Yeah, it was nice. But yeah, I prefer Bluetooth audio s
Re: Already has a removable battery (Score:1)
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You're right: a portable charger serves my needs better than a removable battery would, for the reasons I describe.
As much as I've heard the clamor for removable batteries in iPhones over the years, I've yet to see a scenario where they're actually the best solution for the task at hand. It's a classic XY Problem [xyproblem.info] to me, where people really want to do things a certain way even if there are alternatives that may be better for them.
Bottom line... Say bye bye to the FPS (Score:1)
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Because there is only one way to implement facial recognition on a mobile device, and it can never be improved upon.
Being first isn't everything, no matter what fanboys of $BRAND tell you. Is Apple's implementation better? Nobody knows, outside of Apple.
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In the quest to make it thinner and lighter, they will pioneer anti-gravity and artificial singularities in the forms of a zero mass object with negative thickness.
It's so thin and light that it actually makes you thinner and lighter!
Cut to the cheese (Score:2)
Who cares what they add (well, mostly 'cause they don't really do that anymore), what we're all dying to hear is what plug gets removed this time.
Re: oh well (Score:1)
Security (Score:4, Insightful)
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When will they add a self destruct button for my phone?
Factory reset works on the phone as well as remotely. Making it literally explode would be a wee bit problematic from the legal angle.
Re:Security (Score:5, Informative)
This is a solved problem only repeated by Samsung's NIH approach. Android's default approach already requires an extra element (the user to blink), but that has also been defeated by flicking rapidly between pictures of a person with eyes open and with eyes closed. However many other vendors have taken an option to only scan on the IR spectrum. E.g. The Surface devices can't be defeated with a photograph, video or similar things. But I will bet you a Marsbar that apple doesn't do it because that would add yet another "unsightly" blemish to it's sacred front bezel in the form of another dot (IR LED) that you can see when you hold the device at a certain angle.
Mind you face-unlock doesn't work for anything secure on many devices. E.g. you can't use Samsung Pay or encryption with face-unlock.
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... other vendors have taken an option to only scan on the IR spectrum... I will bet you a Marsbar that apple doesn't do it
I'll take that Mars bar [twitter.com].
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You'll get the Marsbar after the phone ships and it works as intended thankyou very much.
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Will they solve the problem of circumventing this technology with a photo of the person?
I thought the idea was to have multiple front-facing cameras to get more of a 3D image of a person's face. If so, wouldn't that prevent a 2D photo from working? Still, I suppose someone could make a 3D model of your face. I'm not sure facial recognition can get around that problem, unless the facial recognition is able to scan for some level of detail that can't normally be reproduced.
Will law enforcement officials unlock your phone by holding it up to your face?
Any biometric ("something you are") is susceptible to this sort of thing. For a finger print scanner, what's to stop the
Should be Called the Shatterphone (Score:5, Insightful)
Brilliant. To solve the non-problem of having a small bezel-case they will bring the glass screen to the very edge of the device to ensure that when you do drop it, even a short distance, it will shatter the screen.
Why is it that Apple execs think that the ultimate ideal form for every device is to be wafer-thin and all glass, sacrificing every other design consideration for that single obsession?
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Why is it that Apple execs think that the ultimate ideal form for every device is to be wafer-thin and all glass, sacrificing every other design consideration for that single obsession?
Apple execs are using scifi media as a road map where the end goal is a thin transparent device or a holographic popup display projected by the apple watch.