Skip to main content

Apple’s Face ID is two years ahead of Android, say parts suppliers

facial recognition apple
Image used with permission by copyright holder

According to reports from multiple suppliers, Android devices are at least two years behind Apple when it comes to setting up face-identifying tech on the level of Apple’s Face ID.

Apple introduced Face ID in last year’s iPhone X as a replacement for the absence of the long-running Touch ID. Face ID uses an array of cameras and sensors housed in the iPhone X’s notch to quickly identify your face and unlock your phone. It’s not just simple face-recognition — the TrueDepth tech actually sees the 3D model of your face, and will only unlock if it recognizes you perfectly.

Recommended Videos

It’s not perfect, and it’s not always faster than Touch ID — but it’s still a heck of a technological feat and one that Android phones may have to wait up to two years to emulate, according to statements from suppliers whose parts are integral to the tech used in Apple’s Face ID setup.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

What was the key to Apple’s lead? Simply, Apple’s aggressive strategy in monopolizing as much of the supply of these components as possible. According to parts manufacturers Viavi Solutions Inc, Finisar Corp and Ams AG, there simply aren’t enou-gh parts to go around yet, and that “bottleneck” will mean that mass adoption of 3D-sensing tech will be pushed back at least a year. The report points out that vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers, or VCSELs, are particularly scarce, with Viavi being the only major supplier of the required optical filters.

Other aggressive moves from Apple include the investment of $390 million into VCSEL-maker Finisar that ensured Apple’s supply of that particular tech, and similar moves to secure cobalt needed for batteries.

It’s clear that most companies in that particular area are gearing up for a large expansion in the coming years. Tech research firm Gartner predicts that 40 percent of all smartphones will be equipped with 3D-sensing tech by 2021, and component makers are reacting according, with Lumentum and Finisar, in particular, expecting to see large growth during the opening months of 2019.

Android phones have had some form of face-sensing tech for years — however, Apple’s Face ID has been lauded for taking it to the next level, with true 3D-sensing capabilities that is harder to fool than traditional tech. While Samsung introduced a new hybrid biometric that combines iris and face scanning in its Galaxy S9, it’s still a far cry from Face ID.

Mark Jansen
Mobile Evergreen Editor
Mark Jansen is an avid follower of everything that beeps, bloops, or makes pretty lights. He has a degree in Ancient &…
The iPhone Air may be Apple’s most important new iPhone in years
iPhone concept mimicking iPad Pro desgn.

It seems Apple is trying to shoehorn the “Air” concept into the iPhone portfolio, and it may not necessarily turn out to be a wallet destroyer. According to Bloomberg, the “far thinner” iPhone 17 model planned for 2025 will sit between the entry-point iPhone 17 and the more expensive Pro models.

Earlier in May this year, The Information reported that Apple was planning “a significantly thinner version of the iPhone” slated for launch next year. However, the report added that it could well be the most expensive smartphone in Apple’s 2025 lineup. But the latest report from Bloomberg puts this skinnier iPhone model in the mid-segment as a replacement for the ongoing “Plus” model in Apple’s lineup. “The idea is to create an “Air” version of the iPhone of sorts,” says the report.

Read more
Apple just warned some iPhone users about a dangerous spyware attack
The back of the iPhone 15 Pro Max.

Apple is warning iPhone users in 98 countries to be on the lookout for potential mercenary spyware attacks. According to TechCrunch, this is the company's second such warning in 2024.

Folks in the affected countries are receiving the following message from Apple: "Apple detected that you are being targeted by a mercenary spyware attack that is trying to remotely compromise the iPhone associated with your Apple ID -xxx-."

Read more
6 features that iOS 18 stole from Android
An iPhone home screen with iOS 18.

Apple took to the stage in an all-singing, all-dancing presentation at WWDC 2024 to unveil iOS 18, the latest software upgrade for the iPhone. Apple Intelligence may be the headline act that's stolen all the coverage, but iOS 18 will also introduce a boatload of smaller changes that can't simply be forgotten. Once you upgrade to iOS 18, you'll get more customization options, icon theming, a game mode, and more.

Really, Apple fans have never had it so good. But if that seems familiar to some of you, well, it's because iOS is becoming more and more like Android. To Android fans like me, the irony is so, so sweet. Apple fans, enjoy your new and awesome features that have been very obviously cribbed from Android.

Read more