Toronto Star

QUANTUM LEAP

Forget the simple selfie, smartphone cameras about to get a whole lot smarter,

- BRIAN X. CHEN

SAN FRANCISCO— We all know the drill.

For the last decade, smartphone­s have gotten thinner and faster and thinner and faster and, well, you get the picture.

But it’s too soon to write off our smartphone­s as boring. The gadgets are still evolving with new technologi­es. And, for a clue as to what the smartphone of the future might look like, turn your attention to the device’s cameras and the software and sensors that make them tick.

Here’s a peek into how the camera may come into play: As soon as you pick up your gadget, it will see you and know you are the owner and unlock the screen. Overseas, you will be able to point the camera at a restaurant menu to translate items into your language. When shopping for furniture, you can point your phone camera at your living room floor and place a virtual rendering of a coffee table to see how it looks and move around and peek underneath it.

Some of this futurism is already starting to happen.

Next month, Apple plans to hold a special event to introduce a set of new iPhones, including a premium model that can scan 3D objects — including your face.

Samsung, the No. 1 phone-maker, also recently introduced the Galaxy Note 8, highlighti­ng its fast dual-lens camera as the signature feature. And rivals will soon work to catch up with Samsung and Apple.

“2018 will be the year where the smartphone camera takes a quantum leap in technology,” said Philip-James Jacobowitz, a product manager for Qualcomm, a chipmaker that provides components to smartphone makers.

Jacobowitz added that emerging camera technologi­es would be the key to stronger security features and applicatio­ns for augmented reality, which uses data to digitally manipulate the physical world when people look through a smartphone lens.

Here is a rundown on what this all means for how your next smartphone will work. Face Scanning For the last few years, we have become accustomed to unlocking our smartphone­s by scanning our fingerprin­ts or entering a pass code. But when Apple shows its new iPhones next month, including a premium model with a starting price of $999 (U.S.), the company will introduce infrared facial recognitio­n as a new method for unlocking the device.

How would the new iPhone do that exactly? Apple declined to comment. But Qualcomm’s Spectra, a depth-sensing camera system, is one example of how face scanning works.

The Spectra system includes a module that sprays an object with infrared dots to gather informatio­n about the depth of an object based on the size and the contortion of the dots.

If the dots are smaller, then the object is farther away; if they are bigger, the object is closer. The imaging system can then stitch the patterns into a detailed 3D image of your face to determine if you are indeed the owner of your smartphone before unlocking it.

“You’re seeing the contours of the head — it’s not just the front of the face as you’re typically thinking about,” said Sy Choudhury, a senior director of product security for Qualcomm.

Because of the uniqueness of a person’s head shape, the likelihood of bypassing facial recognitio­n with the incorrect face is one in a million, he added. That compares to a false acceptance rate of one in 100 for previous facial recognitio­n systems, which had very poor security.

Older facial recognitio­n systems worked by simply using the camera to take a photograph of yourself and comparing that to an image that was stored on the device. All a thief would need to do to fool the system is hold a photo of your face in front of the camera — which some people already did with Samsung’s facial-recognitio­n feature.

There are, however, limitation­s to infrared-scanning technologi­es. For example, objects that you wear, like a hat or a scarf, might throw off the camera, according to Qualcomm.

In addition, experts said infrared light can get drowned out by bright sunlight outdoors, so face scanning might work less reliably on the beach.

It remains to be seen how exactly face scanning will work in the next iPhone. But Apple is well acquainted with depth-sensing camera technologi­es. In 2013, the iPhone-maker acquired PrimeSense, a company that developed sensors for Microsoft’s Kinect, a depth-sensing camera system that let Xbox players control games using body movements. Analysts expect some rendition of PrimeSense’s technology to appear in future iPhones.

Augmented Reality Depth-sensing cameras may be crucial to enhancing augmented reality, a jargony industry term that probably makes your eyes glaze over. But bear with me for one moment: Augmented reality will have major implicatio­ns for future mobile apps.

It’s no secret that Apple is bullish about augmented reality. In a recent financial earnings call, Timothy D. Cook, Apple’s chief executive, called augmented reality “big and profound,” with major implicatio­ns for gaming, entertainm­ent and business products.

This fall, Apple will release iOS11, its next mobile operating system that includes support for applicatio­ns made with ARKit, a tool kit for app developers to easily create augmented-reality applicatio­ns.

ARKit uses a combinatio­n of the iPhone’s camera and motion sensors, including the accelerome­ter and gyroscope, to let people lay digital objects on top of the real world and interact with them with precise movements.

I got a demo of ARKit from Ikea, the furniture-maker, with its coming app Ikea Place. I placed an Ikea bed on the floor and was able to move around and look underneath it. This type of applicatio­n would be useful for getting a sense of how an item looks and fits alongside other furniture in a space before placing an order.

“This is like a real applicatio­n that real people can use to make real-life decisions,” said Michael Valdsgaard, the head of digital transforma­tion at Ikea.

But the limitation­s of the Ikea Place app underscore what’s missing from ARKit.

For placing virtual objects, the app can detect horizontal surfaces, like a table surface or the ground, but it cannot yet detect walls.

Vertical planes like walls are trickier to detect because they are not as smooth as floors — with doors, windows and picture frames getting in your way. Depth-sensing cameras make wall detection much easier for future iPhones, said Blair MacIntyre, a research scientist who is working on augmented reality for Mozilla, the organizati­on that makes the Firefox web browser.

All the tech giants are betting big on augmented reality. For years, Microsoft has been developing HoloLens, an augmented-reality headset.

In April, Facebook announced Camera Effects Platform, an environmen­t for software developers to build augmented-reality apps for Facebook.

This week, Google unveiled ARCore, an augmented-reality tool kit for Android devices, in response to Apple’s ARKit.

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 ?? YUYANG LIU/THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Apple plans to introduce a set of new iPhones, including a premium model that can scan 3D objects.
YUYANG LIU/THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO Apple plans to introduce a set of new iPhones, including a premium model that can scan 3D objects.

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