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Apple: Possible 3D Laser Scanner for iPhone 8, with Facial Recognition, Augmented Reality, 3D Printing Potential

apple_2003_logo-243x300As Apple’s plans for breaking into the 3D industry continue to confound, small bits and pieces have been thrown out to tease us over the past few years. We’ve tried to imagine what an Apple 3D printer might look like, along with getting all excited about their in-house use of 3D printing and recent foray into virtual reality and continuing to speculate on their multiple patent applications, sifting through the details. We may have been looking in all the wrong places, however, while the most obvious route for Apple’s major entry into 3D technology is staring up at us from the palms of our hands.

It all makes perfect sense now though. The only question is, will it be the iPhone 7s, imbued with new features in a later release—or will we have to purchase the iPhone 8 for 3D laser capabilities? The word is that users will indeed be able to look forward to such new features. This is a prime benefit of Apple’s previous PrimeSense acquisition, giving them access to sensor capabilities that should blow the smartphone competition away for a while—until they figure out how to do it too.

The 3D sensor is expected to released in the iPhone 8, as Apple Insider reports of the latest news from Rod Hall at J.P. Morgan. And while more complex—and fun—capabilities may not be available for a while, the idea is that the sensor will replace the frustrating Touch ID sensor with facial scanning. Hall mentions that it would make just as much sense to see such technology in the 7s series later, along with the iPhone 8, which he refers to as a ‘high end’ model.

Hall sees the 3D laser scanning feature being implemented by Apple in a wafer-level “stacked” optical column [Image: J.P. Morgan, Photonics Media]

This may be quite a powerful display of how the PrimeSense acquisition is paying off. Apple bought the Israeli company for approximately $360 million in 2013, attracted by their talent in creating specialized sensors for both motion and scanning applications. PrimeSense was also behind much of the Microsoft Kinect sensor technology. Now, Hall believes Apple and PrimeSense together will have made improvements to the sensor with the following:

“Creating small, inexpensive, 3D scanning modules has interesting application far beyond smartphones. Eventually we believe these sensors are likely to appear on auto-driving platforms as well as in many other use cases,” offered Hall. “Maybe a fridge that can tell what types of food you have stored in it isn’t as far off as you thought.”

And while many may wonder how that will increase the cost of the next phone, the answer is probably very little. While it may cost more overall (some projections peg it at over $1,000), most likely that won’t be due to this feature, which can be compared to LIDAR capabilities on the smartphone scale. Hall expects that the facial scanning capabilities would add about $10-$15 to the cost of each phone.

PrimeSense technology [Image: PrimeSense]

The iPhone’s 3D laser scanning will only be capable of working in a low-volume capacity, but further releases (many predicted for 2018 at the earliest) may allow for:

“One obvious and potentially most compelling use would be AR/VR experiences in which the user’s hands and other real world objects are being scanned and integrated into a field of view provided by the iPhone mounted into a Google Daydream-like headset,” said Hall. “This would open up many interesting entertainment and gaming experiences not available today and might give Apple something extra in an AR/VR accessory compared to Google and others.”

Discuss in the iPhone 8 forum at 3DPB.com.

[Sources: Apple Insider, MacRumors]

 

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