The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Apple is said to work on touchless control, curved iPhone screen

- By Mark Gurman

APPLE is working on touchless gesturecon­trolandcur­vedscreens for future iPhones, projects that may help the company differenti­ate its most-important product in an increasing­ly crowded market, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

The control feature would let iPhone users perform some tasks by moving their finger close to the screen without actually tapping it.

The technology likely won’t be ready for consumers for at least two years, if Apple chooses to go forward with it, a person familiar with the work said.

Apple has long embraced new ways for humans to interact with computers.

Co-Founder Steve Jobs popularise­d the mouse in the early 1980s. Apple’s latest iPhones have a feature called 3D Touch that responds differentl­y depending on different finger pressures.

The new gesture technology would take into account the proximity of a finger to the screen, the person said.

Apple is also developing iPhone displays that curve inward gradually from top to bottom, one of the people familiar with the situation said.

That’s different than the latest Samsung smartphone screens, which curve down at the edges. So far, every iPhone model has used a flat display.

The iPhone X’s OLED screen curves slightly at the bottom, but the shape is mostly invisible to the human eye.

OLED, or organic light emitting diode, displays can be shaped into curves or even folded, unlike the less-flexible LCD screen technology used in prior iPhones. A curved iPhone may be as little as two to three years away, the person said. Apple is also working on new screen technology, known as MicroLED, but that’s at least three to five years away, Bloomberg News reported last month.

Bothfeatur­esarestill­intheearly research and developmen­t stage and Apple could choose to not go forward with the enhancemen­ts. An Apple spokeswoma­n declined to comment.

The work comes as the Cupertino, California-based smartphone pioneer looks to make its gadgets stand out. Smartphone­s have become increasing­ly similar as Apple, Samsung, Google, and Huawei Technologi­es adopt features like full screens, advanced cameras, and facial recognitio­n at roughly the same time.

In the fourth quarter, Apple was responsibl­e for about 20 per cent of smartphone shipments following the launch of the iPhone X and iPhone 8, beating out second place Samsung and Huawei, according to IDC.

To stay ahead, Apple needs compelling new features and designs. Samsung is already workingona­foldablesm­artphone, while Huawei is seeing increased success in Asia.

Meanwhile, battery endurance was brought into focus this week as a number of websites reported on the relative merits of the current iPhones versus the Galaxy S9 competitio­n. The winner was the iPhone 7. — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? (Clockwise from top left) Lydie (on screen), an asthma sufferer, attends a course from her home through a connection via a robot in a classroom at a high school in Bourg-en-Bresse, southeaste­rn France. • A visitor using a Virtual Reality (VR) headset,...
(Clockwise from top left) Lydie (on screen), an asthma sufferer, attends a course from her home through a connection via a robot in a classroom at a high school in Bourg-en-Bresse, southeaste­rn France. • A visitor using a Virtual Reality (VR) headset,...

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