Apple Watch could get a camera on the end of a watch band's strap

Posted:
in Apple Watch
Apple is still considering ways to add a camera to the Apple Watch, by incorporating an imaging sensor into the band of the wearable device, allowing it to be used for both photographs of the local environment and for the user for FaceTime calls.

Apple Watch Series 4


The Apple Watch is one of the few portable devices Apple produces that doesn't include a camera. While it can arguably perform most of the essential functions of an iPhone, photography has always been limited to remotely controlling the shutter of the iPhone and using the Apple Watch as a portable viewfinder.

In a filing published by the US Patent and Trademark Office on Tuesday, Apple's proposal for a "Watch band with optical sensor" suggests the solution to the problem is to include a camera sensor on the band itself, rather than adding it as an extra component within the already-cramped body of the Apple Watch.

While most designs for the sensor would logically place it near to the body of the Apple Watch itself, something Apple has previously suggested, the latest patent instead opts to place the camera at the end of a band strap. In one design, it is on the end of the long lower strap, which wraps below the wrist to near the top side of the Apple Watch.

Illustration of the end-of-strap camera sensor, button, and how it can be mounted close to the Apple Watch body
Illustration of the end-of-strap camera sensor, button, and how it can be mounted close to the Apple Watch body


In another loop-style strap, the sensor is again at the end and fed through the fixed loop at the top before going back and attaching to an earlier part of the strap. A third option is to use a small dedicated section of strap that is separate from the one that goes around the wrist, but is used to hold the camera sensor and can attach to the rest when not in use.

In all cases, the strap can be manipulated to point the camera into the right direction, as the strap is malleable enough for lining up the shot. In the case of the latter two strap designs, the band can be arranged to resemble a small raised section containing the sensor just above the Apple Watch display, allowing it to be used in a more camera-like fashion, or even for self portrait shots.

While the straps will include connections between the sensor and the Apple Watch, they may also include some sort of flexible core that allows the band to be positioned where the user wants it, such as a metal wire, magnetorhelogical fluid, or metal links. Depending on how it is set up, the strap could also include a hidden button to allow a user to take the shot, without needing to press a button on the Apple Watch.

It is also suggested there could be more than one imaging sensor installed into the end of the strap, as two sensors could allow for one to be on each side. Users could then switch between the sensors to show themselves or their surroundings during a FaceTime call, or even to take photographs or video from both angles simultaneously.

Apple also proposes the use of just one sensor, but having it on a hinged section that can rotate around, allowing just one sensor to pull double duty for self portraits and environmental photography.

An example of a small strap addition holding the image sensor in two positions
An example of a small strap addition holding the image sensor in two positions


Apple files numerous applications with the USPTO on a weekly basis, but while the patent filings reveal areas of interest for the iPhone maker, it doesn't necessarily mean the ideas will make their way into a future product or service.

Cameras in an Apple Watch band have been explored before, but typically by placing the sensor close to the body of the device itself, rather than at the end of the strap. One example from November 2018 suggested two sensors on both components of the strap, allowing for both selfies and normal shots to be taken.

Extending functionality beyond the body of the Apple Watch via the bands has also been suggested in other ways, including using a series of variably illuminable indicators along the strap to provide status levels for functions. For example, the famous Apple Watch Rings could be represented on a band with segmented lines, with parts lit up depending on the user's progress throughout the day, saving them from manually checking the Apple Watch.

Apple also thought about how the band could use light tubes as part of its design, with customizable colors allowing it to be personalized to match the user's clothing or personal style. There have also been filings relating to hiding components in bracelet links, self-adjusting bands, and back plates to add more functions.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 13
    lkrupplkrupp Posts: 10,557member
    As others have pointed out, adding more and more hardware and software features puts more and more drain on the battery. Battery technology is stagnant with major improvements still in the laboratory at MIT and elsewhere.
    macpluspluschiaracerhomie3redraider11jbdragonwatto_cobra
  • Reply 2 of 13
    indieshackindieshack Posts: 328member
    Good, a camera on Apple Watch can’t happen soon enough as far as I’m concerned.
    caladanian
  • Reply 3 of 13
    gebloomgebloom Posts: 10member
    I’m increasingly convinced that the smart phone as the chief personal device is a passing phenomenon. Wearables. 
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 4 of 13
    mac_128mac_128 Posts: 3,454member
    Good, a camera on Apple Watch can’t happen soon enough as far as I’m concerned.
    Yes, but this ain’t it.

    To truly be an iPhone replacement, which in many respects it already is, it will need a camera. I’d expect it to be a face time/selfie cam at first, capable of taking rough, unframed perspective photos in a pinch.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 5 of 13
    StrangeDaysStrangeDays Posts: 12,877member
    gebloom said:
    I’m increasingly convinced that the smart phone as the chief personal device is a passing phenomenon. Wearables. 
    Well, I guess if you put cars in the same boat because of the existence of planes & trains. There will always be a need for a screen in your pocket. It's simply a matter of form factor use cases.
    muthuk_vanalingamwatto_cobra
  • Reply 6 of 13
    lkrupp said:
    As others have pointed out, adding more and more hardware and software features puts more and more drain on the battery. Battery technology is stagnant with major improvements still in the laboratory at MIT and elsewhere.
    maybe a modest battery is included in the camera strap and so is separated (both actually and psychologically) from the watch's battery? although a dead battery is annoying, I think most users would tolerate monitoring the camera's battery separate from the watch's and understanding that usage of the camera is battery constrained (like airpods).
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 7 of 13
    peteopeteo Posts: 402member
    gebloom said:
    I’m increasingly convinced that the smart phone as the chief personal device is a passing phenomenon. Wearables. 
    Well, I guess if you put cars in the same boat because of the existence of planes & trains. There will always be a need for a screen in your pocket. It's simply a matter of form factor use cases.
    You don't know anything about AR do you?
  • Reply 8 of 13
    mobirdmobird Posts: 753member
    Why would the battery need to be separated "psychologically"?
    just giving you a hard time ;) 

    rare comment said
    maybe a modest battery is included in the camera strap and so is separated (both actually and psychologically) from the watch's battery? although a dead battery is annoying, I think most users would tolerate monitoring the camera's battery separate from the watch's and understanding that usage of the camera is battery.
    edited June 2019
  • Reply 9 of 13
    jbdragonjbdragon Posts: 2,311member
    I still remember Samesung's Smart Watch with the WART camera strap on it. There has been a Camera Watch strap for the Apple Watch. Well the one I was thinking about I thought was released already, but it's not. At this point, not sure if it ever will be. It was hyped all over in 2016 and looks to me to be a dead project. http://getcmra.com/
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 10 of 13
    Those representations of a camera on the watch looks absolutely terrible.  Aesthetics are a large part of a watch's desirability and nothing shown here contributes.  Detracts? Most definitely.  Contributes?  Nope.  Idk, but maybe, just maybe the watch isn't the best place to stick a camera.  I could easily imagine every one of those representations being damaged in less than 10 minutes after putting the watch on a wrist.
    edited June 2019 watto_cobra
  • Reply 11 of 13
    mac_128mac_128 Posts: 3,454member
    lkrupp said:
    As others have pointed out, adding more and more hardware and software features puts more and more drain on the battery. Battery technology is stagnant with major improvements still in the laboratory at MIT and elsewhere.
    maybe a modest battery is included in the camera strap and so is separated (both actually and psychologically) from the watch's battery? although a dead battery is annoying, I think most users would tolerate monitoring the camera's battery separate from the watch's and understanding that usage of the camera is battery constrained (like airpods).
    That would be my guess. This goes against Apple's design philosophy, which was intentionally not to extend functionality into the bands. Apple shut down a third party extended battery company by disabling the diagnostic ports to prevent such accessories.  Putting a small power source in the band to power things such as limited feature cameras and a BT radio to transmit data to the watch would go a long way to keeping Apple's design philosophy intact and seems a more Apple-like approach that allows wristband accessories a common platform approach rather than opening up the diagnostic ports to everyone.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 12 of 13
    GeorgeBMacGeorgeBMac Posts: 11,421member
    If Apple is thinking of expanding watch band functionality to include a camera, you can be sure that they are thinking of it for other things as well -- such as additional sensors that won't fit inside or on the back of the watch itself.

    Blood pressure and Glucometer come to mind.  Or, maybe an external battery?


    watto_cobra
  • Reply 13 of 13
    irelandireland Posts: 17,798member
    gebloom said:
    I’m increasingly convinced that the smart phone as the chief personal device is a passing phenomenon. Wearables. 
    When do you predict it passes?
Sign In or Register to comment.