I am really excited about this. I need a new phone I am thinking, so
next year if I get what I want in an Iphone I will get one. I love
touch id and I refuse to give it up.

On 9/6/19, M. Taylor <mk...@ucla.edu> wrote:
> Hello All,
>
> As I am one of those insane people who is waiting for Apple to re-introduce
> Touch-ID back into the iPhone, before purchasing a new model, I found the
> following article interesting.
>
> Mark.
>
> In-screen Touch ID potentially signals a backward step ahead
> By Ben Lovejoy
>
> In-screen Touch ID could be appearing in iPhones as early as next year,
> according to a new report today. But while the current report suggests that
> both Touch ID and Face ID fans will be catered for, that may not remain the
> case for long.
>
> The debate between the respective fans of Touch ID and Face ID began when
> Apple launched the iPhone X, the first iPhone to be launched without the
> fingerprint reader since it made its debut on the iPhone 5 S in 2013.
>
> With the iPhone X launch, Apple seemed pretty clear that Face ID was the
> future of iPhone authentication. It is, says Apple, faster, easier, and
> more
> secure than Touch ID.
> Face ID reinvented the way we unlock, log in, and pay. Some of our most
> sophisticated technologies - the TrueDepth camera system, the Secure
> Enclave
> and the Neural Engine - make it the most secure facial authentication ever
> in a smart-phone. And even faster and easier to use.
>
> Close family members aside, Apple says that Face ID is 20 times more secure
> than Touch ID.
> Every fingerprint is unique, so it's rare that even a small section of two
> separate fingerprints are alike enough to register as a match for Touch ID.
> The probability of this happening is 1 in 50,000 with a single, enrolled
> finger.
>
> The probability that a random person in the population could look at your
> iPhone or iPad Pro and unlock it using Face ID is approximately 1 in 1
> million with a single enrolled appearance.
>
> Most owners of iPhone X/XS and latest iPad Pro devices say they would never
> go back. That's certainly true for me.
>
> But while that appears to be the consensus view, it's not a universal one.
> There are owners of Face ID devices who say they find it less reliable than
> Touch ID, and there are owners of Touch ID devices who claim they won't
> upgrade until Touch ID is available on newer devices.
>
> Today's report says that Apple is aiming to please all of the people all of
> the time, with plans to offer both forms of biometric authentication in
> future iPhones, starting in either 2020 or 2021. In-screen Touch ID would
> enable Apple to bring back Touch ID without the need for a Home button.
>
> Apple is apparently readying a new under-display integrated Touch ID
> fingerprint sensor "as early as its 2020 iPhones" next fall, according to a
> report today from Bloomberg. The report says it would be an addition to the
> existing Face ID authentication and unlock system, allowing users to
> authenticate with either fingerprint or face biometrics [.]
>
> Offering both Touch ID and Face ID would increase overall convenience and
> speed of unlocking the iPhone. A user would register their fingerprints and
> facial signature, and the phone can unlock as soon as either recognition
> succeeds. This means Touch ID can make up for Face ID's weaknesses, and
> vice
> versa.
>
> The problem may come in the future, however. Once In-screen Touch ID proves
> reliable, the temptation for Apple to lose the notch by dropping Face ID
> may
> prove irresistible.
>
> Losing the notch, to effectively give an all-screen design, would create a
> similar wow factor to that of the iPhone X when it launched. Jony Ive may
> have bowed out, but his "single slab of glass" vision for the iPhone likely
> lives on within the design team.
> Apple already has form for prioritizing form over function in this way. The
> company has long aimed to make iPhones as slim as possible, even though
> many
> of us would prefer a slightly thicker phone with better battery life and no
> camera bump.
>
> Could Apple do both, and embed Face ID tech beneath the display too?
> Long-term, anything is possible. One Android manufacturer has already
> demonstrated an under-screen camera. But that's just a proof of concept at
> this stage, and Apple would also need to embed the IR emitter and dot
> projector too before we could have under-display Face ID. That's not
> something that's going to happen anytime soon.
>
> There is, then, a risk that Apple will at some point prioritize design over
> performance by dropping Face ID in favor of the clean look of an iPhone
> that
> offers only embedded Touch ID. That, to me, would be a huge shame.
>
> I love Face ID. The beauty of it is that you get strong authentication that
> is almost invisible. I pick up my phone, and it's unlocked. I open my
> banking app, and a second or so later, I'm looking at my bank balance. They
> say the best user interfaces are invisible, and that to me is very nearly
> true of Face ID. Having to touch a finger to a device now feels clunky in
> comparison.
>
> If Apple supplements Face ID with embedded Touch ID, I'm all in favor. But
> if it later drops Face ID to get a sleeker design - as I fear it might -
> that would to me be a backward step. I hope I'm wrong.
>
> What's your view? Would you be willing to sacrifice Face ID to lose the
> notch? Please take our poll and let us know your thoughts in the comments.
>
> Original Article at:
> https://9to5mac.com/2019/09/05/in-screen-touch-id/
>
>
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-- 
Lenron Brown
Cell: 985-271-2832
Skype: ron.brown762

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