It hasn’t even been three months since the launch of iPhone X and we already have Android smartphone makers who are shipping technologies similar to that in handsets that cost a third of the Apple smartphone.
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| A customer sets up his iPhone X Face ID during its launch at the Apple store in Singapore November 3, 2017 |
iPhone X, which sells in India at a starting price north of Rs
90,000, is Apple’s current flagship smartphone. When the company first unveiled
it this past September, it emphasised on Face ID, an iPhone X-exclusive facial
detection technology which can unlock the handset by just looking at you. It’s
the selling feature of the iPhone X.
It hasn’t even been three
months, and we already have Android smartphone makers who are shipping
technologies similar to that of Face ID in their handsets that cost a third of
the iPhone X. For instance, OnePlus earlier this week announced extending
its FaceUnlock feature to its older OnePlus 5 smartphones.
OnePlus, however, isn’t the
only one to offer this feature. Vivo recently launched V7+Selfi Phone with
a similar facial unlock feature for Rs 19,000 approximately.
InFocus earlier this month
launched a Vision 3 smartphone
with Face ID and edge-to-edge display for just Rs 6,999, becoming the most
affordable smartphone in the market to offer such
features.LG V30, an excellent premium phone, also offers a similar feature.
For sure, what Android
players are offering isn’t as advanced as iPhone X’s Face
ID. These Android players are leveraging the existing software and hardware
sensors, including front camera to give an elementary Face ID-like experience.
And that’s not a negative at all.
As we have mentioned
in our review as well, iPhone X with all of its features and despite an
expensive price tag is an excellent premium phone. And its Face ID works really
well. It’s fast, mostly accurate and works in dark-light conditions as well.
But so does OnePlus
5T. Called Face Unlock, it is admittedly not as advanced as iPhone X’s Face ID,
but by and large, it gets the work done. OnePlus categorically says its Face
Unlock shouldn’t be treated as the most secured tool.
“Face Unlock makes
sure it is you. It does so by analyzing, through the front camera, over 100
identifiers on your face such as the distance between your eyes or between your
nose and upper lip. We have included numerous parameters, so that Face Unlock
works in different lighting conditions as well as when you are wearing
glasses,” the company said in a blog post last month.
My beef with Apple’s
Face ID is that there are too many tradeoffs a user has to make. For instance,
there’s no fingerprint scanner, a much convenient method to unlock your phone.
Other than Apple, no other smartphone company has removed the fingerprint
sensor. Even Samsung’s much-hyped iris scanner on Galaxy Note 8 is in
addition to the fingerprint scanner.
And then there’s the
omnipresent notch to accommodate a slew of sensors. It looks strange and
getting used to it takes some time. Over the past few weeks, several apps have
been optimised for the iPhone X screen, making the experience a tad better.
That said, everyone
loves inclusion of a futuristic technology. And if it is replacing an existing
one, it has to be really that good or exclusive.
We have seen various
brands shoving USB Type-C-based audio in smartphones. This is happening without
actually having spent time on building an ecosystem that ensures a smooth phase
out of archaic 3.5mm headphone jack.
It has been more than
two years since handset manufacturers began shipping smartphones without the
archaic 3.5mm headphone jack. Yet, plenty of smartphones today include the
traditional headphone jack, keeping the industry from ditching the age-old
technology.
Apple’s Face ID hasn’t
been without controversies. There are plenty of videos on the web that
reveal how easy or with a little effort they were able to bypass Face ID. While
we may choose to overlook these sporadic stories considering it is just the
first generation of Face ID, but then we are talking about the most expensive
iPhone in the history.
Face ID is certainly
not a half-baked feature but Apple at times offers just minimal or
geography-exclusive bare bone feature. For instance, if you look at Photos app,
Google has leapfrogged with its Photos app using advanced machine learning and
artificial intelligence. And Google Photos is a cross-platform product
with a greater mass appeal.
If your prime use is
just to lock/unlock the phone, technologies such as OnePlus’ Face Unlock sound
good enough. And that should be enough for a lot of people who are okay with
not being able to pay for apps or sign into apps through facial recognition.

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