Just the other day Apple unveiled the iPhone X, the company’s first iPhone with an OLED display and also the first iPhone to sport the new Face ID facial recognition technology. The feature was touted as being quick, secure, and flawless, but Craig Federighi’s demo on stage was anything but, and it took a couple of tries before it worked.

Now many were quick to assume that this proved that Face ID was not what Apple had initially promised, but Apple has since issued a statement to Yahoo (via 9to5Mac) explaining what had gone wrong. According to the statement, “People were handling the device for stage demo ahead of time and didn’t realize Face ID was trying to authenticate their face. After failing a number of times, because they weren’t Craig, the iPhone did what it was designed to do, which was to require his passcode.”

This is actually similar to what happens when someone else tries to log into your phone using Touch ID and failing multiple times, in which users would have to enter the passcode in order to unlock the device. In fact the screen shown during the demo pretty much stated that, but perhaps it was missed by many.

Some did speculate correctly that this might have been the cause of the hiccup, and the statement from Apple does clear that up. However we should note that there have been some early hands-on reports that did suggest that Face ID did run into some issues, but we guess we’ll have to wait until November before we can test it out for ourselves.

Filed in Apple >Cellphones. Read more about , , and .

5.8"
  • 2436x1125
  • Super AMOLED
  • 463 PPI
12 MP
  • f/1.8 Aperture
  • OIS
2716 mAh
  • Non-Removable
  • Wireless Charging
3GB RAM
  • A11 Bionic
  • None
Price
~$1095 - Amazon
Weight
174 g
Launched in
2017-09-01
Storage (GB)
  • 256

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