In a few months,Gangnam Daughter in law (2019) the wait for the "iPhone 8" will finally be over, and for a brief moment, we'll all get a break from the rumor mill churn.
Despite Apple's doubling down on secrecy, the iPhone 8 has leaked, and leaked, and leaked. We know a lot about the phone. We're pretty sure it'll have a new glass and stainless steel design, an edge-to-edge OLED display, wireless charging, a vertically-aligned dual camera, no headphone jack, and -- this is a big one -- no home button.
SEE ALSO: Future iPhones won't have a charging port — here's whyIf you, like us, keep tabs on every single iPhone 8 rumor, you'll know that speculation constantly flip-flops.
One day the iPhone 8 will have a Touch ID fingerprint sensor embedded underneath the display. The next day it's an ugly hole on the back of the phone. And now reports say there won't even be a fingerprint sensor on the phone at all.
Which one is it? Everything's a rumor so, honestly, who the hell knows. Even the guys who always seem to know Apple's plans aren't even sure.
KGI Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo and Bloomberg'sMark Gurman have an impressive track record when it comes to reporting on unannounced Apple products, but there's something that just doesn't feel right about their latest reports claiming the iPhone 8 won't come with a fingerprint sensor at all.
We can't go back to using easily-crackable PIN codes.
Apple introduced Touch ID on the iPhone 5S in 2013 and has improved on it ever since. The iPhone 7 and 7 Plus come with the second-generation fingerprint scanner, which is 2x faster than the original.
Since its introduction, all flagship Android phones have adopted their own fingerprint scanners as a way to unlock the phone and protect user data from prying eyes.
Simply put, fingerprint scanners have made our most private and important possession safe. It's the best way to secure your phone -- safer than PIN codes, or passwords, or pattern unlocks.
If Apple does ditch the fingerprint sensor on the iPhone 8, what will replace it? We can't go back to using easily-crackable PIN codes.
Kuo and Gurman both say Apple's working on advanced "3D sensing for facial recognition." Sounds high tech -- Samsung's Galaxy S8/S8+ use face recognition to unlock the phone in additionto the rear-positioned fingerprint sensor -- and while it's possible Apple might have figured out how to make it more secure (or so they'll claim) than a fingerprint there are other problems that sprout from a lack of a fingerprint sensor.
For example, would the the face recognition work in the dark? I've tried unlocking the S8 with my face in the dark and, boy, does it not work great. You could get around the darkness issue on the S8 if you turn on the phone's iris scanner, which sees right through the dark, but you can't have it and face recognition both on -- it's one or the other. In the middle of the night, or the backseat of an Uber at 2:00 a.m., or at a dimly-lit bar, a fingerprint sensor just works more efficiently.
And with no rumors about Apple including an iris scanner on the iPhone 8, it seems highly unlikely it'll make an appearance this late in the game.
More importantly, how will Apple Pay on the iPhone 8 work without fingerprint authentication? On the S8, face recognition can't be used to authenticate Samsung Pay transactions; you need to use the fingerprint scanner or the iris scanner.
Unless Apple's face recognition tech is somehow way more secure than Samsung's, Apple Pay would get sliced at the knees and there's no way that's gonna happen.
So what's Apple gonna do? There's one theory that makes sense: move the sensor to the power button. Every leaked image, prototype, or dummy has shown the iPhone 8 sporting a longer than usual power button.
A translated Weibo post (via BGR) suggests Apple might move the fingerprint sensor to the home button. It wouldn't be perfect, but it'd be a hell of a lot better than a sensor on the backside below the Apple logo.
It's not unprecedented for a power button to double as a fingerprint sensor. Sony's flagship Xperia phones (all the ones not sold in the U.S.) have had the sensor in the power button for years, and you know what? They work just fine.
Embedding Touch ID underneath the screen would've been ideal, but the challenges associated with doing so could've stalled things.
Samsung ran into issues with getting Synaptics to develop sensors within displays, which is why the S8 has a fingerprint sensor on the back and upcoming Note 8 will probably have the same, too. Vivo recently announced it had embedded a fingerprint sensor under a display using Qualcomm technology, but it's only on a prototype, and the feature won't make it into commercial phones until the first half of next year.
Phones are all about tradeoffs. I could live with Touch ID in the power button, but if there's none at all? That would really suck.
Topics Apple Cybersecurity iPhone
Previous:Soundtrack to a Drug War
Next:American Mirage
NASA's surprising reason for crashing into an asteroid's moonNASA Artemis megarocket engineers are waiting to eat 50 gallons of beansNASA's asteroid crash captured in dramatic before and after picturesAdvertising growth fuels Bilibili's Q2 earnings, loss narrows to $83.7 million · TechNodeAustralia vs. Scotland 2024 livestream: Watch T20 World Cup for free'House of the Dragon': Who deserves the Iron Throne, Team Black or Green?Life below Mars surface is more plausible than ever, scientists findBYD adds Pakistan to its global EV production footprint · TechNodeChina’s Zeekr unveils refreshed models in advanced driverNetEase Cloud Music suffers twoDoes 'Inside Out 2' have an endYouTube tests AI live chat summaries and channel QR codesThe United Nations will begin tracking methane emissions from spaceArtemis 1 launch: Meet the badass woman running NASA's new moonshotBYD adds Pakistan to its global EV production footprint · TechNodeBillions of snow crabs disappeared, and scientists have a good clue whyChina now has over 180 LLMs approved for general use · TechNodeBlack hole vomits years after gobbling up a starPark rangers saw something unprecedented in this year's 'Fat Bear Week' bearsEvery song in 'Bridgerton' Season 3, TV's queen of classical pop covers Translation as an Arithmetic of Loss by Ingrid Rojas Contreras How I Tried to Be a Good Person by Ulli Lust On Effort and Letting Go by Salvatore Scibona Is Lockheed Martin making South Korean streetwear? Match Group leans into AI with new team The Print Bar in Australia: Everything you need to know On Fasting by Kaveh Akbar Summer is Made of the Memory of Summer by Nina MacLaughlin The Anonymous Diary by Kathryn Scanlan The Start of Summer by Nina MacLaughlin What is girl math? Here's how economic thinking can actually be fun. The best Grok interactions according to users on X Redux: In Memoriam, Susannah Hunnewell by The Paris Review Wordle today: The answer and hints for December 10 Bored Ape NFT investors sue Yuga Labs after NFT values crater The Hemingway Marlin Fish Tournament by Andrew Feldman Wisconsin vs. U of A basketball livestreams: Game time, streaming deals, and more Remi Cruz on her Twice bias, Maangchi, and being Lana Del Rey's favorite vlogger The Tale of Genji: What Is It? by Anthony Madrid Eggs and Horses and Dreams by The Paris Review
1.4223s , 10130.9609375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Gangnam Daughter in law (2019)】,Wisdom Convergence Information Network