One of the details that will reach Apple's mobile operating system with the launch of iOS 10 is what they presented as "Rise to Wake" or "Raise to wake up." If you do not know what I mean, the new function will make an iPhone wake up when we pick it up, that is, when we pick it up, the iPhone will turn on its screen and we will see the time and the notifications received. If at that moment we put our finger on the Touch ID, we will enter the home screen.
As you will know if you are regular readers of the blog, iOS 10 beta 1 no longer shows the famous "Swipe to unlock" and instead it tells us to tap on Touch ID. It is understandable that this novelty has not been liked by all users, and less than they will like it when they find out that the Rise to Wake function will not be available for all devices. In fact, the new feature will only be available on devices with M9 and later co-processors.
Rise to Wake will only wake iPhones with M9 co-processor
El M9 co-processor It is more powerful and efficient than previous models and is responsible for us being able to use the "Hey Siri" function without our device being connected to a power outlet. In other words, the M9 allows the iPhone to be always listening or waiting for some commands, such as the command to invoke Siri or, what this post is about, notice when we lift it to turn on the screen. With that said, the devices that support the new feature will be as follows:
- iPhone 6s
- 6s iPhone Plus
- iPhone SE
As you see, on the list iPad Pro not present, Apple's professional tablets that also feature the M9 co-processor. The reason? Well, it is not clear, but support for both iPad Pro could arrive in future betas. Thinking badly, we can think that Apple prefers to sell us an official case that will wake up the device if we lift its lid.
The Rise to Wake feature could be a response to complaints from some users about how fast the touch ID second generation: if we want to wake up the iPhone 6s / Plus with a finger whose fingerprint is registered, what we will do is enter the springboard. This theory does not hold when we consider that the iPhone SE has the first generation Touch ID and, even then, you will be able to use the new function.
In any case, iOS 10 was presented on the 13th and anything can change before its official launch scheduled for September.
Thanks for the information.
Very wapo what you comment I have not had the possibility to try it yet but I really like the idea
As always capping things that can be functional but reserves it for new mobiles like hey siri caped on iphone 6 when it works luxuriously with jailbreak, you can see the duster on those of .
It is one thing that it works… it is another thing that it has the same performance, which it does not. I have had 'Hey Siri' always activated on my iPhone 6 with Jailbreak and the battery consumption was brutal. The M9 coprocessor does more than just marketing, and it is what makes the microphone and motion sensors always active with minimal battery consumption. I am the first to criticize a bad move (by Apple and any company), but you have to be judgmental and inform yourself before doing so….
I will read them in the future saying that rise to wake is a novelty that was introduced by apple.
I have an iPhone 5s with iOS8.4 + Jail and that has been working for a long time with InstantTouchID ... Apple should take all the good things from jail and implement it on their iPhones, accessibilities that do not work on "certain" iPhone's, but rather on iOS's
Rise To Wake not only serves to unlock the mobile without pressing anything, but it also serves to see if you have new warnings / notifications just by taking the mobile and placing it vertically, and that is something that the tweak you mention does not do, it only unlocks the mobile.