Asset icons pulled from iOS beta show muted HomePod microphone, environmental alerts

Posted:
in iPod + iTunes + AppleTV edited January 2018
Delves through iOS beta firmware released on Friday has revealed some HomePod iconography, showing an Apple TV, assorted environmental icons probably for HomeKit, a muted microphone icon associated with the HomePod, and other graphics associated with use and setup of Apple's Siri speaker.




Discovered by Filipe Esposito in the latest iOS 11.2.5 beta, and posted on Twitter, the graphics are all the same art style that doesn't match anything else in iOS or macOS. Esposito also believes that there are strings in the code that suggest that a HomePod can recognize multiple voices, and provide custom responses tailored to those individuals.

According to the Home app assets, users with HomePod will be able to create "scenes" that disable Siri temporarily. It will probably be very useful for parties. pic.twitter.com/k2gPc50Kmr

Filipe Espsito  (@filipekids)


Other graphics in the asset file include an assortment of environmental icons like water, a picture of a spinning fan, temperature icons, and an assortment of other alert graphics.

The graphics were found inside a HomeUI private framework included with the iOS beta.

Apple's $349 HomePod was revealed at the 2017 WWDC and will ship later than the previously announced December. It is powered by an Apple A8 chip featuring realtime acoustic modeling, audio beam-forming, and multi-channel echo cancelation. It also features a subset of Siri, optimized for music consumption.

Alongside the iOS 11.2 beta and HomePod firmware update, Apple noted that full SiriKit requests, such as those involving contacts, Messaging, Lists, and Notes will be handed off to a connected iPhone or iPad for processing. Looking further at developer documentation, music-related requests look to be handled independently on the device, and won't require handoff to a linked device.

Earlier firmware examinations suggested that the A8-powered HomePod will boast 1GB of RAM and a 272-by-340 pixel screen, suggesting that rudimentary app support will be possible for the hardware in the future.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 5
    fallenjtfallenjt Posts: 4,054member
    I’ll wait to see the review whether it’ll stack up to the Sonos Play:3. I know from many reviews that the Sonos Play:3 beats the $399 Monstrous Google HomeMax. People even recommended if you have $400 budget for smart speakers, 2x Sonos 1 units are the better deal. Let’s see gow the $349 HomePod sound against those. 
  • Reply 2 of 5
    looks like homepods can be paired based on one of the icons shown in the photo. neat.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 3 of 5
    k2kwk2kw Posts: 2,075member
    fallenjt said:
    I’ll wait to see the review whether it’ll stack up to the Sonos Play:3. I know from many reviews that the Sonos Play:3 beats the $399 Monstrous Google HomeMax. People even recommended if you have $400 budget for smart speakers, 2x Sonos 1 units are the better deal. Let’s see gow the $349 HomePod sound against those. 
    I read a comment some where that Play:3 is Sonos’s oldest speaker and need of updating.
    I got two Sonos ONEs for $350 and really like the sound.

    I’m hoping the AirPlay 2 support comes out too.

  • Reply 4 of 5
    looks like homepods can be paired based on one of the icons shown in the photo. neat.


    Wasn't this announced? A Homepod can detect if there is another Homepod and they can work in tandem as stereo speakers.



  • Reply 5 of 5
    fastasleepfastasleep Posts: 6,417member
    LOL. These *must* be placeholder graphics to be redesigned later — this looks like someone unearthed a clipart library from the MacPaint days to throw this together.
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