Patents

Apple wants to make it easier to provide live videos in Keynote presentations

FIG. 6A illustrates a user interface for providing live videos in a Keynote presentation.

Apple wants to make it easier to provide live videos in Keynote presentations as evidenced by a patent filing (number US 20240323313 A1) for “User Interfaces for Providing Live Video.”

About the patent filing

The patent filing relates generally to computer user interfaces, and more specifically to techniques for providing live video. In the patent filing, Apple notes that some techniques for playback of video in presentations are limited in the manner in which video can be provided. For example, some existing techniques require that video be composited into slides of a presentation, which may require relatively high amounts of computational resources as well as preclude the use of live video in such presentations.

Apple’s patent filing is for a technique the provides electronic devices with “faster, more efficient methods and interfaces for providing live video.” Such methods and interfaces optionally complement or replace other methods for providing live video. Apple adds that such methods “produce a more efficient human-machine interface,” for instance, by reducing the number of inputs required by provide live video. And for battery-operated computing devices, such methods and interfaces conserve power and increase the time between battery charges.

Summary of the patent filing

Here’s Apple’s abstract of the patent filing: “The present disclosure generally relates to providing live video. An example method includes, at a computer system, while in an editing mode for a presentation, receiving, via one or more input devices, a request to insert an object onto a first slide of the presentation, wherein the request includes associating the object with a source for live video; and while in a presentation mode for the presentation, displaying, via a display generation component, the first slide including concurrent display of the object and one or more visual elements, wherein: in accordance with a determination that the object is associated with a camera, the object includes a live video stream from the camera; and in accordance with a determination that the object is associated with a non-camera external device, the object includes a live video stream that mirrors a portion of a display of the non-camera external device.

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Dennis Sellers
the authorDennis Sellers
Dennis Sellers is the editor/publisher of Apple World Today. He’s been an “Apple journalist” since 1995 (starting with the first big Apple news site, MacCentral). He loves to read, run, play sports, and watch movies.