Google working on Human Presence Sensor for Chromebooks – report

Tech giant Google is working on a Human Presence Sensor (HPS) for upcoming Chromebooks, which could be used for face unlock or other long-awaited Chrome OS features. Picture: AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez

Tech giant Google is working on a Human Presence Sensor (HPS) for upcoming Chromebooks, which could be used for face unlock or other long-awaited Chrome OS features. Picture: AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez

Published Sep 5, 2021

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TECH giant Google is working on a Human Presence Sensor (HPS) for upcoming Chromebooks, which could be used for face unlock or other long-awaited Chrome OS features.

Earlier this year, in a blog post celebrating 10 years of Chromebooks, Google included a small teaser of what's next for Chrome OS.

In it, there's a promise of using acesensor technologies for more personalised experiences, 9To5Google reported.

While there has been significant work done over the last few months to make this human presence sensor work on a hardware level, there's only been one clue so far as to what Chrome OS will do with it.

Specifically, if a Chromebook has an HPS, there will be an eye-shaped icon in the system tray, the report said.

For now, while the feature is early in development, the icon is static, it's plausible that Chrome OS will show a different icon, depending on whether or not it can detect your presence.

The tech giant is developing the human presence sensor in collaboration with Antmicro, a "software-driven tech company developing open and modern industrial edge and cloud Al systems".

Among other responsibilities, Antmicro appears to be working out how to work with the sensor hardware using open-source software where possible, the report said.

This is not the first time that Google and Antmicro have worked together, as the two companies -- both Platinum founding members of the RISC-V Foundation -- collaborated to create the Coral AI developer board, along with some other projects.

IANS

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