Apple’s Face ID For iPhone X Uses Advanced Machine Learning & 30,000 Infrared Dots To Map Faces; Here’s How It Works

Apple’s Face ID For iPhone X Uses Advanced Machine Learning & 30,000 Infrared Dots To Map Faces; Here’s How It Works

7 years ago
Anonymous $wKBR2uNMvM

http://wccftech.com/apple-face-id-iphone-x-everything-there-is-to-know/

Apple’s 2017 event for the iPhone is bigger than anything we’ve seen before. For quite a while at least. The last time Apple turned this many heads was with Touch ID. Biometric recognition wasn’t known in the smartphone world then. And it also took Android a long time to catch up. But, as is with everything in the tech world, time passes fast. This time, it’s biometrics that have come to Apple’s rescue after a slow couple of years for the iPhone. Facial recognition is here folks. What a time to be alive. Take a look below for all the details.

Last year, Samsung surprised all of us with the Galaxy Note7. In more ways than one really. The smartphone became the first gadget to feature Iris recognition for mainstream devices. But, the feature failed to catch on as the Note7 went up in flames. The Korean tech giant came back with a strong Galaxy S8/S8+ launch. The pair also feature Iris recognition, but so far, we haven’t seen that big of an impact for the feature.

Apple’s Face ID For iPhone X Uses Advanced Machine Learning & 30,000 Infrared Dots To Map Faces; Here’s How It Works

Sep 12, 2017, 10:20pm UTC
http://wccftech.com/apple-face-id-iphone-x-everything-there-is-to-know/ >Apple’s 2017 event for the iPhone is bigger than anything we’ve seen before. For quite a while at least. The last time Apple turned this many heads was with Touch ID. Biometric recognition wasn’t known in the smartphone world then. And it also took Android a long time to catch up. But, as is with everything in the tech world, time passes fast. This time, it’s biometrics that have come to Apple’s rescue after a slow couple of years for the iPhone. Facial recognition is here folks. What a time to be alive. Take a look below for all the details. >Last year, Samsung surprised all of us with the Galaxy Note7. In more ways than one really. The smartphone became the first gadget to feature Iris recognition for mainstream devices. But, the feature failed to catch on as the Note7 went up in flames. The Korean tech giant came back with a strong Galaxy S8/S8+ launch. The pair also feature Iris recognition, but so far, we haven’t seen that big of an impact for the feature.