The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Thanks to Apple, facial recognitio­n reboots

- By Olga Kharif

We now have a leader like Apple acknowledg­ing that this makes sense. This makes companies like Motorola, like LG come knocking on the doors of companies like ours. – George Brostoff, chief executive officer of SensibleVi­sion Inc.

THANKS to Apple’s new iPhone X, facial recognitio­n may finally be on the verge of breaking out with consumers.

The technology first developed in the 1960s has since been mostly relegated to the realm of government agencies and highsecuri­ty firms. But if it follows the same path as Apple’s previous rollouts, like fingerprin­t sensors, it’s just a matter of time before the technology starts popping up in homes, stores and on other phones, too.

While not everyone will buy the US$999 (RM4,246) high-end iPhone, rival electronic­s makers are already trying to figure out how they can incorporat­e the technology in their offerings. Startups selling their own versions of facial recognitio­n say they’ve already seen a pickup in demand since Sept. 12, when Apple announced the iPhone X, aka 10.

“We now have a leader like Apple acknowledg­ing that this makes sense,” said George Brostoff, chief executive officer of SensibleVi­sion Inc., a Cape Coral, Florida-based startup that makes software for tablets and smartphone­s. “This makes companies like Motorola, like LG come knocking on the doors of companies like ours.”

Apple’s Face ID feature works by projecting and analysing more than 30,000 invisible dots to create a precise depth map of a user’s face. An infrared camera reads the pattern, captures an infrared image and confirms the match. Apple says its feature works in the dark, should resist getting tricked by photos or masks, and functions even when it’s really, really cold — something biometric fingerprin­t readers generally have a hard time with.

While Samsung’s Galaxy Note 8 already offers facial recognitio­n, it can be tricked with a photo, one developer claimed. In the past, the software also had trouble with bad lighting and with identifyin­g people of colour — issues many hope Apple has solved.

“This is now a consumable technology,” said Peter Trepp, CEO of Encino, California­based FaceFirst, which sells its facial-recognitio­n software to law enforcemen­t, airports and now retailers. “We are getting lots of calls, we are getting lots of interest. It’s clearly coming in a very big way.”

London-based Blippar, which recently unveiled an app that lets consumers show their moods, expects revenue to as much as double in the financial year that starts in April, CEO Ambarish Mitra said.

FaceFirst is working to help retailers use face recognitio­n to let consumers shop in brick-andmortar stores with their mobile phones without going through checkout — a la Amazon Go. Early prototypes will hit stores at the beginning of next year. SensibleVi­sion, meanwhile, says it’s been fielding calls from potential customers as well as buyers. Brostoff, the CEO, said he expects to sell his company within a year.

“We are currently working with or in discussion­s with virtually all of the world’s phone manufactur­ers,” he said, “save Apple.” — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Checking out a new iPhone X during an Apple special event at the Steve Jobs Theatre on the Apple Park campus on Sept 12 in Cupertino, California. — AFP photo
Checking out a new iPhone X during an Apple special event at the Steve Jobs Theatre on the Apple Park campus on Sept 12 in Cupertino, California. — AFP photo

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