Well of course that's true, but Lenron was asking what's wrong with providing both touch ID and face ID, and I was just telling him what the author of the article thinks is wrong with face ID. I'm not saying I agree with it or that it's anything more then just conjecture.

On 9/11/19 12:04 AM, Sieghard Weitzel wrote:
As you say "according to the article", but as far as I could tell that article 
is pure guesswork


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of 
Christopher Chaltain
Sent: Tuesday, September 10, 2019 8:08 PM
To: [email protected]; lenron brown <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: In-screen Touch ID potentially signals a backward step ahead, 9 to 
5 Mac

According to the article below, Apple may be ditching face ID in order to get 
rid of the notch. The article does say that you may get both for a while, but 
if Apple is serious about going to a flat slab of uninterrupted glass, and they 
can't figure out under the screen face ID, then that's when you might see face 
ID going away to be replaced by the under the glass touch ID.



On 9/10/19 10:42 AM, lenron brown wrote:
Face id isn't going anywhere, I don't get it what's wrong with having
both if possible.

On 9/10/19, Sieghard Weitzel <[email protected]> wrote:
These are just guesses and conjecture at this point and in my opinion
there is little point in engaging in them until we actually find out
more regarding this in-screen or under-screen Touch Id feature and if
and when it might be coming. Sure, Apple has introduced and abandoned
features before, 3D touch seems to be one of them, but I somehow
doubt that Face Id is going away considering that it is being used
more and more everywhere and also because Apple still seems to care
about accessibility and there are certainly people who can't use
Touch Id because maybe they don't have hands or arms etc.

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf
Of Ed Worrell
Sent: Tuesday, September 10, 2019 8:01 AM
To: 'Carol Pearson' via VIPhone <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: In-screen Touch ID potentially signals a backward step
ahead, 9 to 5 Mac

Hey Mark,

I agree with the author of the article. I hope they don’t ax the
FaceID functions. I have found FaceID to be much more reliable then
TouchID ever was. Granted there are some minor trade offs with FaceID
vs TouchID. At the payment terminal TouchID can be a little quicker
as you and I have discussed off list. In everyday use I find the
FaceID function to be much quicker and much more friendly to use.
There were many times with TouchID it simply would not recognize my
finger print and it would kick me to the keypad anyway. This then
defeated the purpose of TouchID to me… Maybe I’m the odd man out here but I 
love FaceID and it’s simplicity.

Just my thoughts on the FaceID vs TouchID argument.

Ed W.



On Sep 6, 2019, at 6:51 PM, M. Taylor <[email protected]> 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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