Skip to main content

Apple has a simple solution for unlocking an iPhone without using FaceID

For owners of Apple’s more recent iPhone models, FaceID does what it says on the tin, allowing you to use your face to unlock your handset with a minimum of fuss. And then along came the coronavirus.

Recommended Videos

Now, with so many people wearing masks outside or in the workplace, unlocking the phone with your face means removing your mask. This is not only annoying, but it also increases the risk of touching your face — something we’ve been warned against doing as it’s known to be an entry point for the virus. Alternatively, you can wait for your device to give up trying to make a positive identification, at which point it will ask for your passcode instead.

Well, finally Apple is moving toward making it a whole lot easier to unlock your phone if you’re wearing a mask.

Spotted in the latest beta version of iOS 13, owners of iPhone X, XS, and 11 models, which use the face-recognition technology, can immediately swipe up from the bottom of the display to bring up the passcode option. No mask fiddling, and no hanging around while quietly swearing under your face covering of choice. Just swipe up and you’re one secret code away from accessing your handset.

It’s a quick and easy solution, and one so simple that many will be wondering why Apple didn’t include it from the start. After all, in some countries, face masks have always been a common sight during, for example, hay fever season.

The new feature is being tested in iOS 13.5 — released to developers on Wednesday, April 29 — and should soon be rolled out to everyone via an update, ending what has become a frustrating process for countless iPhone owners.

The beta release also includes the APIs (application programming interfaces) needed to include tracking technology in upcoming iPhone apps geared toward contact tracing as part of efforts to tackle the coronavirus pandemic.

Contact tracing can help to contain the spread of the virus as it can be transmitted through close proximity with infected individuals.

Data collected through contact tracing apps for both iOS and Android will be shared with local public health authorities, making it easier for them to identify who an infected individual has come into contact with. Identified individuals will then be contacted and asked to self-isolate at home while they wait to see if they develop any coronavirus symptoms.

The opt-in system is being prepared in partnership with Google and will use Bluetooth technology “with user privacy and security central to the design,” Apple said.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Apple might discontinue its most ‘courageous’ iPhone accessory
Apple's Lightning to 3.5mm headphone adapter.

Apple introduced the iPhone 7 in 2016. The phone is noted for being the first Apple handset to ship without a traditional 3.5mm headphone jack — something Apple infamously praised as a move that took "courage."

At a time when most wired headphones needed one of those jacks to listen to music, Apple had an interesting solution: a Lightning to 3.5mm headphone jack adapter that shipped with every new phone. According to MacRumors, Apple is set to end production on that accessory.

Read more
It’s the end of the road for these two iPhone models
Apple iPhone 6S Plus

Seeing your favorite handheld gaming device in a retro store has a unique way of making you feel old, but Apple might have topped it. According to the company, the iPhone XS Max and iPhone 6s Plus are now "vintage." They join the ranks of the iPhone 4 and even the iPad Pro 12.9-inch model.

It's not wholly unexpected. Apple declares a device vintage after five years, and that means it becomes more difficult to have that device repaired or to find replacement parts for it. Obsolete is applied to products that are more than seven years old, but sometimes certain variants get that label early.

Read more
Google Gemini arrives on iPhone as a native app
the Google extensions feature on iPhone

Google announced Thursday that it has released a new native Gemini app for iOS that will give iPhone users free, direct access to the chatbot without the need for a mobile web browser.

The Gemini mobile app has been available for Android since February, when the platform transitioned from the older Bard branding. However, iOS users could only access the AI on their phones through either the mobile Google app or via a web browser. This new app provides a more streamlined means of chatting with the bot as well as a host of new (to iOS) features.

Read more