Apple's stylus receiver concept would improve the precision of digital pen-based input

By Neil Hughes

As recent rumors have suggested Apple could offer a simple stylus to enhance a larger iPad model, a new patent application shows what kind of improved pen-based input technology the company has been working on behind the scenes.

Apple's investigations into stylus support for touchscreen devices was disclosed in a new filing published by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office this week, discovered by AppleInsider. The proposed invention, entitled Superheterodyne Pen Stimulus Signal Receiver," describes a device that could have a unique frequency for stylus-based input that would be less than that of a traditional fingertip touch signal.

In the filing, Apple notes that most conventional styluses have a bulky tip made of a material capable of interacting with a touch-sensitive device. These devices are often meant to emulate a user's finger for compatibility with modern touchscreens, which are meant to be controlled with fingertips.

But Apple says that these conventional styluses, by their nature, lack the precision and control of traditional writing instruments, like a pen and paper.

In the proposed invention, Apple says its goal is to create a stylus capable of generating more precise input than a fingertip or current styluses can allow. Apple's solution is additional hardware that it says would not consume more power than a conventional touch-sensitive device.

Apple's method would use a "superheterodyne receiver," which can take an input signal and convert it to another frequency. The technology actually dates back to the origins of radio transmissions, and was developed by a U.S. soldier during Wold War I.

Virtually all modern radio receivers use "superhet" technology for superior selectivity and sensitivity. But in Apple's more modern use, a hardware demodulator inside a device like an iPad would convert stylus touch input signals into an intermediate frequency signal less than that of a traditional fingertip touch signal.

In short, Apple's system would feature a touch sensor that could detect the difference between a fingertip touch and a stylus touch, and offer more precise input accordingly.

The new patent application comes soon after a recent rumor suggested Apple could launch a simple stylus alongside an anticipated 12.9-inch "iPad Pro" later this year. Analyst Ming-Chi Kuo of KGI Securities also noted that a stylus is more precise than a person's fingers, which could make it a more convenient method of input than a keyboard and mouse in some cases.


Development studio FiftyThree's iPad stylus is one of dozens already on the market.

According to Kuo, Apple is likely to launch the stylus accessory as an optional add-on, rather than including it alongside the jumbo iPad. He believes the stylus will feature basic technology in its first iteration, while future models could add more advanced features like 3D handwriting.

Though the company has publicly panned pen-based input for years, Apple's interest in stylus-based input is not new. This week's filing is just the latest in a string (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6) of stylus concepts the company has explored behind the scenes.

The superhet stylus signal receiver concept, published this week, was first filed with the USPTO by Apple in October of 2013. The proposed invention is credited to Shahrooz Shahparnia, whose LinkedIn profile states he is a touch ASIC and sensor architect at Apple.