The first of the pair is a focus on the fact that Face
ID works in the dark, so even if you have to get your phone unlocked in less - than - optimal lighting, the iPhone X's TrueDepth camera can handle that.
Not exact matches
Beyond the
work the company has done to keep the wrong people out of the phone, Apple claims that Face
ID will let the right person
in even
in the
dark, while wearing glasses or a hat, and after growing a beard.
We want photos of you sweeping the glitter off the village hall floor; heading out to teach 5 people on a
dark evening half an hour's drive away after a long day at
work; your piles of philosophy books stacked next to your mat; your tabs of marking for trainees; the scrubby you use on the handstand footprints on the wall; the loose change rattling
in the donation box after the PWYC; your studio rent bill; the baby sick on your yoga top after mums and baby yoga; the holes
in your favourite decade - old yoga leggings; the charity shop where you buy more; coffee stains on cork blocks and the hospital room where you teach cancer patients; the costume box for your yoga and theatre kids class; your
ID badge for prison
work; the hug from the student who finally learned to stand on one leg...
Face
ID uses infrared camera technology so it
works in the
dark.
Face
ID also
works in pitch
dark environments thanks to infrared sensor
in TrueDepth camera module.
The Face
ID works with the iPhone X's True Depth camera system which includes an infrared camera that detects the user's face even
in the
dark.
It's not just super-secure; Face
ID is also incredible fast, and thanks to clever sensors, it
works even when you're wearing glasses, hats, or
in the
dark.