Force
Touch, Apple’s new pressure-sensing technology coming to the Apple
Watch and its 2-pound, 0.52-inch-thin MacBook is, according to reports,
also coming to the iPhone 6 update later this year.
You should consider this very good news.
During
Monday’s Apple Watch Event where Apple surprised the world with the
ultra-slim (and gold!) MacBook, I had an opportunity to try out what
Apple calls “Force Click” on the featherweight portable.
Force
Click is more or less the same technology as you’ll find on the
upcoming Apple Watch. In the laptop, there are a bunch of sensors under
the large trackpad that detect pressure. The tricky part is that even
though the trackpad only ever moves slightly down from the surface of
the laptop that it shares with the full-sized keyboard, haptic response
tricks you into thinking the trackpad is descending much further.
Haptics
are not particularly esoteric or new. They’re tiny vibrations that can
feel like buzzes, taps or clicks and are generated by super-tiny motors
hidden, in this case, just under the trackpad surface.
In
the MacBook, Force Touch / Force Click let me open a video and then use
the fast-forward button almost like an accelerator in a car: the harder
I pressed on the trackpad, the faster the video playback went. I also
used it to preview a browser link by just giving a harder press to a
link in an email. Similarly, on a document, I pressed once to highlight
and then pressed harder for an expanded preview. In each case, I swore
the trackpad was moving down vertically. It wasn’t — at all. A light
click under my fingers made me think I was gradually pushing through
physical downward steps.
This
technology has a dual benefit. First of all, it solves the problem of
how you create “pressable buttons” in devices that either do not
actually support button movement or where they’re so thin that the
movement has to be significantly limited. It also means that developers
can use this "faked" range of motion to activate additional features in
their apps.
Now let’s imagine the iPhone 6 with its hundreds of thousands of apps.
Force
Touch will add a new dimension of functionality to almost everything on
the iPhone. It may also do away with some things. Perhaps the
double-click necessary to see all running apps disappears in favor of a
harder press. One-click for the app carousel and, if your press harder,
two or three haptic clicks for accessibility mode (a feature you
currently access with three rapid presses of the home button).
It
might also improve fingerprint registering in Touch ID. Instead of
picking up and placing your finger back on the button, you might press
harder and even move your finger as you do. Underneath, the button would
have to use the simulated layers to turn the sensor on and off to read
all the different parts of your fingerprint. The clicks would be your
indication to move your finger around on the button.
Force
Touch’s haptic response could be used in gaming. So in addition to
using your fingers and thumbs on the Retina HD display, you’ll keep a
finger or thumb on the home/Touch ID button where Force Touch will add a
physical dimension to game play. You could "feel" gunshots, steps and
even running with a tiny "push."
You
could use it to change drawing tool widths, so a harder press for a
wider pen or, maybe, a “deeper” press for more spray paint.
I
could see Force Touch being paired with the iPhone’s iSight camera. You
could press lightly to zoom in a bit, or harder to zoom in faster.
Another
motor in the iPhone would mean additional power consumption, but for
now let's assume that that's an easily surmountable hurdle. These are
tiny motors, after all.
The
best way to think about this is that Force Touch should add layers of
new functionality to almost everything the iPhone does and if it works
as well as it did in my brief time with the MacBook, it will likely
transform the way we interact with Apple’s best-selling mobile device.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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