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Enhanced vibration (called "Taptic Engine") give the iPhone and Apple Watch their taps and thumps, and it already does a few things on the iPhone 6S and later models to feel tactile in iOS 10 (scroll wheels in settings, or pressing in on app icons). Pressing in on a part of the screen will probably feel the same as pressing in on the solid-state home button does now. The bigger problem, of course, becomes how to relocate that Touch ID fingerprint sensor -- or come up with a replacement. (More on that below.).
iPhones currently stick four apps at the bottom of the home screen, locking them in place as you swipe to additional pages: useful, but inefficient, Swiping up for the Control Center usually accomplishes more, getting to settings and even some app shortcuts fast, Control Center is getting expanded in iOS 11, where it now offers a single page of user-configurable widgets and switches, But if that same updated Control Center page had a mini dock at the bottom for those same apps -- and/or a virtual home button -- it would basically be a one-stop shortcut, The problem with exiling the home button to the ted baker chillie iphone 7 soft feel shell case - tranquillity black dock, though, is that it turns a single action -- pressing the handy home button that we have now -- into a two-step process: swiping first and then clicking the screen..
It still feels like the variable pressure-sensitive 3D Touch technology that iPhones 6S and later use is way underutilized, to the point where it feels unnecessary. But what if pressing down on the home screen opened up sublayers, or app folders beneath? Maybe pressing down on the bottom of the screen could launch back to the home area, or Control Center. 3D Touch is there, and it's theoretically versatile.. now Apple just needs to put it to better use. One-screen access to everything: is this is the post-home-button home screen?.
The iPad has already started exploring new ways of navigation in iOS 11, (The beta has been out since June, and the final version will likely be available in mid-September.) The app dock adds a lot of favorite apps for quick shortcuts, making better use of the iPad's additional screen real estate, It's not a massive change, but it's better than what it was in iOS 10, and better than the Touch Bar on recent MacBook Pros, The swipe-up app dock could be a model for what the iPhone 8 app area looks like, Maybe something on a smaller scale, with nested menus? I ted baker chillie iphone 7 soft feel shell case - tranquillity black just want to get to what I need faster..
On an iPad Pro with iOS 11, swiping up brings a dashboard with open apps, plus Control Center. It's a single place to swap between apps or adjust settings. Basically, it's a type of Home Screen, buried beneath the grid of apps that is currently called the Home Screen. Maybe that's what Apple could do with an iPhone 8 without a home button. Ultimately, there are plenty of workarounds for pulling the home button, many of which Apple has already laid the groundwork for. But the bigger question remains: what happens to Touch ID? Reports say that the top-end iPhone will ditch it. I still find that hard to believe. Touch ID is still pushing its way through Apple's product line -- it was added to MacBook Pros in 2016 -- and it's the key to Apple Pay, which still has a ways to go to gain traction at retailers in the US.
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