The U.S. Patent
and Trademark Office today officially granted Apple a patent (via AppleInsider) describing methods for automatically
adjusting screen brightness to suit the content being displayed. The patent,
which was originally filed for in mid-2006 and can actually be traced back to a
separate 2002 application, addresses techniques for saving battery life on
portable devices.
The improved
techniques reduce power consumption by lowering display intensity at
appropriate times. In one embodiment, the display intensity can be controlled
depending on the type of content being displayed. For example, when displaying
certain types of content, the display intensity can be lowered from its
otherwise high, constant intensity level. In another embodiment, the display
intensity can be controlled depending on the characteristics of the content
being displayed. For example, when displaying images that are light, the
display intensity can be lowered from its otherwise high, constant intensity
level. In still another embodiment, the display intensity can be controlled
depending on the type and characteristics of content being displayed.
Apple's
battery-powered devices have long had the capability to automatically dim
displays based on such criteria as power source (battery vs. wall power),
ambient light levels and usage (dimming the display of a device that hasn't
been used for a particular time interval). Dimming the screen based on content,
such as when a particularly bright image is displayed, requires a more
sophisticated approach, something that Apple has clearly been working on for some
time.
Apple actually
now uses a variation on this invention for its Passbook application in iOS 6
for the iPhone, automatically boosting the display's brightness to maximum when
the app is launched in order to make it easier for scanners to read the 2D
barcodes used on passes within the app.
The patent
suggests that Apple's plans for content-sensitive automatic brightness
adjustment could even extend as far as frame-by-frame or scene-by-scene
adjustments when viewing videos, with users also being able to configure their
own preferences for content-based brightness. [MacRumors]
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