It's official: The OnePlus 6T will have an in-screen fingerprint scanner.
The news comes via CNET, which confirmed the rumor with OnePlus. "By adding this feature as an addition to other display-unlocking options such as Face Unlock, users will have options to unlock the display in a way that is most efficient for them," the company told CNET.
And even though the OnePlus 6T won't be the first phone with this feature, it will be the most important test for in-display scanners so far.
SEE ALSO: Here's everything we think we know about the OnePlus 6TIn-display fingerprint scanners differ from typical, capacitive fingerprint scanners as they're placed under the smartphone display instead of somewhere on the phone's chassis. They can be optical or ultrasonic; an optical sensor, as seen on some phones from Chinese brand Vivo, illuminates your fingertip as you press the screen and captures the reflection, then compares that to the image it got when you registered the fingerprint. They should be roughly as secure as capacitive fingerprint scanners (such as the iPhone 8's), but are a little tougher to get to work in practice. This is mainly because the display -- semi-transparent as it may be -- is still in the way, between your finger and the sensor.
I've tested two phones that feature an in-display fingerprint sensor: Vivo X21 and the Vivo NEX S, and had hands-on time with several others. The bad news is that none of them worked flawlessly. At worst, they were unusable, forcing me to delete my fingerprint and register it again. At best, I was able to register a fingerprint and unlock the phone with it sort of reliably — maybe 80 percent of the time. And still, there would come a bad streak, often at the worst possible time, during which I wasn't able to unlock the phone with a fingerprint at all, forcing me to enter my PIN or password.
Tweet may have been deleted
I suspect I'm not the only one with such issues, but you probably haven't heard much about them because none of the phones with in-display fingerprint scanners have so far been available in North America, with limited exposure to Europe. Had Samsung or (heaven forbid) Apple launched a phone with a fingerprint scanner that performed like this, you'd never hear the end of it.
The OnePlus 6T will be different. The OnePlus brand is well-known in the U.S. and Europe, and has been lauded by numerous reviewers for making great and yet affordable phones. The OnePlus 6T is the company's next flagship, and for many users in Europe and the U.S. it will be the first encounter with in-display fingerprint-scanning tech.
It's impossible to say in advance how well OnePlus 6T's fingerprint scanner will perform. OnePlus' parent company is the Chinese electronics giant Oppo, so it's safe to assume that the tech will be an evolutionary upgrade of (or the same thing as) the in-display scanner found in Oppo's R17 Pro, which I haven't tested. I do have to say that none of the in-display fingerprint scanners I did try have been anywhere near perfect.
OnePlus is aware of this peril. The company told CNET that the technology "wasn't mature enough" to include on a OnePlus phone -- until now.
We won't know for sure until we can test the OnePlus 6T ourselves, but the way its in-display fingerprint scanner performs will have implications for other brands' phones as well. Rumors say Samsung has been trying to introduce this technology to its phones for years, but it keeps getting delayed as it's not quite there yet.
The OnePlus 6T won't live or die by the quality of its fingerprint sensor. The phone will also have face-unlocking technology, which greatly offsets issues with the fingerprint reader — I've relied on it a lot on the aforementioned Vivo phones, and after a while I turned off the fingerprint scanner completely. But if OnePlus manages to polish it to make it at least nearly as good as traditional fingerprint scanners, it might (finally) usher an era in which this technology becomes commonplace.
文章
47812
浏览
593
获赞
86576
GoFundMe bans anti
GoFundMe is cracking down on anti-vaxxers.The popular fundraising website says it will no longer allChance the Rapper is engaged, and we're begging for a wedding invite
Chance the Rapper celebrated the 4th of July with a different kind of fireworks display. The 25-yearSex robot brothel banned from opening in Houston
The U.S. won't get its very first "robot brothel" after all.The Houston City Council amended an ordi13 people share the weirdest dog names they've ever encountered
Forget Shark Week, it’s Bark Week on Mashable. Join us as we celebrate all the good dogs, whic'SighSwoon' merges self
Scrolling through @SighSwoon on Instagram is the equivalent of picking up a mysterious book at a thrHuawei Mate 20 X is bigger than an iPhone XS Max
Huawei's 2018 smartphones have landed, complete with super-sized action.On Tuesday, Chinese smartphoDuckDuckGo, the pro
In an age where it seems nearly every major internet service is looking to hawk your personal data,Penguin that loves untying shoelaces is the delightful little jerk you've been looking for
Jerks can sometimes be good -- at least when they're penguins.Jill Twiss shared a video of a penguinComedian gives her family brilliant informational pamphlets before going on a date
Anticipating her family's inevitable questions, Mary Beth Barone prepared an informational pamphletGoogle's Mark Risher: We've never abused your 2FA data
There's arguably no company that knows more about e-mail security than Google. Its online account, pScientists have developed the world's first full
Classic black and white x-rays, move down the bench.New Zealand company MARS Bioimaging has developeEverything we know about the OnePlus 6T
OnePlus doesn't appear to be slowing down this year. It's full speed ahead with another new AndroidMom faceswaps her kid with Thomas the Tank Engine, and it's incredibly cursed
Faceswaps are inherently pretty terrifying. Who thought this was a good idea? The proportions neverSex robot brothel banned from opening in Houston
The U.S. won't get its very first "robot brothel" after all.The Houston City Council amended an ordiHome DNA test results from 23andMe to help develop drugs
Pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline has invested $300 million into home DNA testing company 23andMe