Monday, September 28, 2015

The iPhone 6s and 6s Plus have a gyro bug in AR apps, devs ...

The iPhone 6s logic board, image respect of iFixit

Apple’s new iPhone 6s and 6s Plus have a new M9 co-processor that serves as a marshaling center for all the numeral dirt coming from the phones’ nonuniform sensors, coupled with the gyro. The iPhone 6s uses the same InvenSense 6-axis spindle and Bosch Sensortec 3-axis accelerometer that were responsibility fine in the former iPhone edition, but here they are presenting a problem, at least with some third-party augmented sooth apps.Users have been reporting that while trying to watch the night sky, they used an AR app called Sky Guide that lays over stars and constellations names and positions. On the iPhone 6s, however, this map sort of floats all over the place, symbolistic bad tie-in between the input from the gyro/accelerometer, and the app’s code. Apple’s dishonoring software, like Maps, doesn’t particular this, while other third-party AR app makers complained that they have the same issues going about only on the new iPhone 6s, so it’s a matter of buggy APIs, which in the future will be fixed by Apple soon. In the meantime, don’t shake your iPhone 6s uncontrollably when an AR app is all over the place, the gist is likely software-related. Here’s the the dope from the makers of Sky Guide:Quick update to the update: iPhone 6s and 6s Plus users are reporting problems with the way the Sky Guide dodecuple scale is functioning. We’re aware of it and are subito ferment on a fix. Thanks for your lenity and sorry for the inconvenience!source: AppleInsider

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