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Apple Glass could steal the Apple Watch’s best feature

Apple tree Glass could steal the Apple Watch's all-time feature

Apple Glass concept
(Image credit: idropnews/Martin Hajek)

Apple's VR headset and the Apple Glass smart spectacles could exist controlled by a take on the Digital Crown found on the Apple Watch and AirPods Max.

That's what nosotros can posit from a new Apple patent, flagged by Plainly Apple, which shows how a Digital Crown could be used to easily control functions similar zooming on Apple'due south much-rumored mixed and augmented reality headsets.

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That sounds like a neat mode to control a VR or MR headset or pair of smart glasses, But the extra interesting feature hither is the haptics Apple is proposing to put into such a "crown input."

"The crown module can further include a feedback organization that provides localized haptic feedback at the crown," the patent explained. "The haptic feedback can be effectively perceived by the user at the crown without causing the entire caput-mountable device to vibrate against the head and/or face of the user."

Such a system could permit for more tactile control. Going past our feel with VR headsets with integrated controls, having controls that offering a form of feedback that allows for initiative control when you tin can't actually look at the device you are controlling, would be welcome. Touch on panels on VR headsets, for instance, can occasionally be a little catchy to get used to.

Apple Glass digital crown patent

(Image credit: USPTO)

According to the patent, this haptic feedback could be varied then that a wearer of an MR headset or AR glasses gets a distinct bit of feedback to item when they are starting and when they are stopping interacting with something. For example, one vibration could signal the start of zooming into augmented reality map data with another signaling when they've reached the maximum practical zoom limit.

Combined with audio and visual feedback, the haptic Digital Crown arrangement patent somewhat describes an idealized MR and AR headset feel where a variety of sensors allow for better control and responses from a wearable device.

"Other user sensors can perform facial feature detection, facial motion detection, facial recognition, eye tracking, user mood detection, user emotion detection, vocalization detection," the patent noted.

Patents often describe feature-rich devices and concepts that, if they become a reality, are not as well equipped as start envisioned, But Apple tree has a reputation for taking existing tech and refining it into killer products.

And Cupertino could do this for an MR headset and the Apple Glass. However, all nosotros have are leaks, rumors and speculation to go off, then it might be some time before we see such ideas detailed in Apple patents become a reality.

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Roland Moore-Colyer is U.1000. Editor at Tom'due south Guide with a focus on news, features and stance articles. He oft writes about gaming, phones, laptops and other $.25 of hardware; he'due south as well got an interest in cars. When not at his desk-bound Roland can be found wandering around London, often with a look of curiosity on his face up.

Source: https://www.tomsguide.com/news/apple-glass-could-steal-the-apple-watchs-best-feature

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