Ready or not, the iPhone’s home button and Touch ID are going away

AB Ziggy

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Ready or not, the iPhone’s home button and Touch ID are going away

Last year, the iPhone X’s gesture-based interface and Face ID were novelties. This year, it looks like they’ll be the standard.
p-1-2018-iphones-may-mark-the-beginning-of-the-end-for-home-button-and-touchid.jpg

This year could be the first in the history of the iPhone that Apple does not release a new phone with a home button.

According to reports from credible media outlets, the company will introduce three new phones next week at its press event on September 12, and all of them will assume the design motif of last year’s iPhone X, with its rounded edges, notch at the top front where various sensors live, and a display that takes up most of the front of the phone. There will be no home button–the new phones will use the iPhone’s X’s swipe gestures for returning to the home screen and navigating apps.

Perhaps most importantly, it appears that Apple’s fingerprint reader technology, Touch ID, will be completely gone from this year’s phones. The company will be relying on Face ID, the facial recognition technology it introduced in last year’s iPhone X, for security across this year’s line. And it’s doing so just as a new kind of in-display fingerprint reading technology has matured. (If Apple’s past practice holds true, the iPhone 8 and 8 Plus will remain available, saving the home button and Touch ID from utter extinction for one more year.)

This choice matters to users. I’ve used both the iPhone 8 and the iPhone X extensively. I don’t miss the home button for navigation at all, but Touch ID is still better than Face ID in some circumstances. Example one is mobile payments, which works beautifully with Touch ID and less smoothly with Face ID. Touch ID is also better if your phone is sitting on a table. When my iPhone X is laying face up on my desk, the FaceID can’t see me (it can see the ceiling just fine), so I have to either tap in my passcode or pick up the phone and point it at my face to unlock it. With Touch ID, I could just rest my finger on my home button.

Granted, Touch ID didn’t work perfectly in its debut on the iPhone 5s, but it got much better with the iPhone 6. The same may be true with Face ID–Apple will almost certainly enlarge the FaceID sensor’s field of view, for example.

The company’s decision to ditch Touch ID wasn’t an easy one. In the spring and early summer before the fall 2017 release of the iPhone X, Apple was indeed working on phone designs that integrated a new kind of Touch ID sensor into the display of the iPhone X, a knowledgeable source told me at the time. The engineers tried for months to make the embedded sensor work accurately and reliably, but ultimately gave up on the idea.

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In its place, the engineers adopted Face ID, which uses a spray of tiny light beams emitted from the front of the phone to look for the familiar contours of a user’s face. Now Apple appears to be standardizing on Face ID. Apple’s hardware design chief Dan Riccio said in an interview with TechCrunch’s Matthew Panzarino that once Apple got Face ID working, it dumped Touch ID from the iPhone X and “never looked back.”
When Apple tried to build a fingerprint sensor into the iPhone X’s display, the technology was immature. Not anymore. Android phone makers have made fingerprint on display (FOD) technology work. And they’re trying to play it as a differentiator against the iPhone. Analyst Ming-Chi Kuo says in a recent investor note that the reason for this is twofold: “The user feedback on the iPhone is lower than expected,” he writes, and, “The user feedback on the first FOD smartphone, Vivo’s X21 FOD version, is higher than expected.”

In aggregate, iPhone X users certainly don’t hate Face ID. Far from it. Creative Strategies did a survey of iPhone X owners back in March, and asked for their reaction to the technology. Of the 680 respondents, 65% said they were very satisfied with Face ID, and another 28% said they were somewhat satisfied. And 79% said they were very satisfied with the X’s swipe-based gesture interface (necessitated by the lack of a Home button), while 15% said they were somewhat satisfied. The survey also asked iPhone X owners if they missed having Touch ID on their phone. “Here while the overall sentiment remains positive, it was a little more muted with 50% saying they strongly disagreed and 21% saying they somewhat disagree,” wrote Creative Strategies analyst Carolyn Milanesi in the report.

For a time it seemed possible that Apple would offer both Touch ID and Face ID in new iPhones, so that people like me could use different authentication methods in different situations. But in a recent research note, Ming-Chi Kuo, who is often right about Apple’s iPhone plans, says Apple has already decided not to use Touch ID in next year’s phones. At this point, new iPhones with in-display fingerprint sensors would be a shocker.

My colleague Harry McCracken and I will be at the September 12 event, and we’ll have full analysis of the iPhones and other products once they’re announced.
 

Ciggavelli

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I have an X, and I haven’t missed the home button or Touch ID at all...not once. In fact, when I use my iPad, I actually find it to be a chore to be forced to use the home button. Also, Face ID works very well. It probably fails like 4 times out of a 100.
 

winb83

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Face ID isn't all that good. It has a very limited range and requires the phone be held upright camera on top. The novelty of it wore off for me about a month after getting the X.

Using a phone in the car with the fingerprint sensor you didn't even have to look at the phone to unlock it. There's no great way to unlock the iPhone X without picking it up and/or looking at it.

I pick up my Note9 and by the time I'm looking at it the phone is already unlocked and past the lock screen. I pick up my iPhone X and it takes a while to unlock and swipe up in comparison.
 

detach

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Apple gesture control is dopeness :ahh: Android P gestures on the other hand :scust:

But Apple need to keep TouchID. Either add a finger print scanner on the back or to the power button.
FaceID:camby:
And add another side button for SIRI.
 

Kamikaze Revy

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I have an X, and I haven’t missed the home button or Touch ID at all...not once. In fact, when I use my iPad, I actually find it to be a chore to be forced to use the home button. Also, Face ID works very well. It probably fails like 4 times out of a 100.
Do you use Apple Pay?
I use it very often and like how well it works with the home button. My main concern about Face ID is it not working as seemless with Apple pay as it does with the home button. As far as being able to easily unlock the phone I’m not too worried
 

Matt504

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Do you use Apple Pay?
I use it very often and like how well it works with the home button. My main concern about Face ID is it not working as seemless with Apple pay as it does with the home button. As far as being able to easily unlock the phone I’m not too worried

I use apple pay and there are two ways to trigger it, double tap the side button or the simpler way, hold your phone near the reader. I use apple pay multiple times a week and it's completely seamless, I hold my phone near the reader, look at my phone and the transaction is complete.
 

brownsugah

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I don't mind. Face ID isn't really that bad... also I have an iPad mini 4 that has Touch ID so I'm good there.

I just want to know the differences between the X and the XS...and if it's worth it to upgrade.
 

Sin Simma

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To the people complaining about Face ID, that’s the norm when it comes to Apple’s first iteration. Touch ID wasn’t on point when it first dropped either, but the 2nd version was perfect (6S and beyond). iPhone X users are basically beta testers. If this years phone debut the second generation Face ID, it’s going to be miles better than the first.

As for in-display Touch ID, this might not happen until 2020, a full year when it’s the standard for Android. Apple would have perfected then with USB-C.
 
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