The company's technology allows for users to swipe their fingers around a
display, and based on that, have the device perform an action.
Google has won a patent on a new way to unlock a device and access apps.
The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) on Tuesday awarded
Google a patent on "Alternative Unlocking Patterns." The technology
describes a method by which users would create several different
unlocking patterns that would pertain to a particular action. Upon
completing that pattern input, the device would act accordingly.
According to Google's patent, the company envisions a way in which
users would open up applications, check for new calls, or perform other
actions through the use of the patterns. Currently, software allows for
different unlocking patterns, but all they do is open up the handset's
software. Google's technology would bring people to a certain place
within the software.
Here is how Google describes the patent:
The stored unlocking patterns are associated with respective actions
that are performed upon completion of the respective unlocking patterns.
The unlocking patterns are associated with a same level of unlocked
security access to the computing system. The computing system responds
by unlocking the computing system and performing the action that is
associated with the matching unlocking pattern.
Google doesn't say in the patent whether it'll integrate the technology into
Android.
As with other major companies, Google applies for and is awarded
patents on a wide array of technologies. In many cases, those
technologies don't ever launch.

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