Skip to main content

Apple patent application points to new digital remote control system for Apple TV

new digital remote control patented by apple tv
With TV interfaces becoming increasingly complicated, a TV remote’s numbered buttons are more of a hinderance than help. As laid out in a patent application published today and filed more than a year ago, Apple hopes to reinvent the remote control by, well, eliminating the remote control.

Apparently designed as an app for, you guessed it, Apple’s iPhone and iPad, this digital remote control uses shrunken down versions of icons and pictures common in TV graphic interfaces. The approach seems similar to Google’s Chromecast, which is also controlled using mobile devices.

The digital remote would obviously pair nicely with Apple’s own set-top device, the Apple TV. Currently, you can navigate around Apple TV’s menus with either the aforementioned Apple TV remote control or the current version of a Remote app, but Apple’s patent looks to improve on current solutions by having the remote work across platforms, including smartphones, tablets, or laptops.

Apple digital remote controlStretching a bit further, the design could serve as the perfect solution for the mysterious device Apple is reportedly working on with Comcast (yeah, we know), which is claimed to be a sort of hybrid solution to the set-top paradigm, incorporating linear TV with streaming apps and on-demand solutions all from a single, Apple-designed interface. And of course, there’s the fabled TV set Apple has supposedly been working on for about the last decade. But we won’t even begin to speculate about that unicorn — there’s enough of that out there already.

Whether it incorporates live TV or not, users could potentially see the digital remote control go from concept to reality when Apple finally announces a hardware refresh of the aging third-gen Apple TV. Or, Apple could simply issue a software update that incorporates the new remote control interface with the current Apple TV.

However it unfolds, these concepts usually take considerable time to go from the page to the real world — if they’re adopted at all. We’ll keep track of any new developments and update this story accordingly, so stay tuned.

Williams Pelegrin
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Williams is an avid New York Yankees fan, speaks Spanish, resides in Colorado, and has an affinity for Frosted Flakes. Send…
VPNs are coming to Apple TV in tvOS 17
VPN listing in the Apple TV App Store.

As is often the case with Apple's major press releases, some of the more interesting (if obscure) details often are tucked away toward the end, or even in the footnotes. Case in point: Support for third-party VPNs is coming to Apple TV when tvOS 17 is released this fall.

For most normal folks, that's probably not a huge deal. You plug in your Apple TV at home or wherever, and it just works. But for some folks, it's going to open up a world of fun.

Read more
Apple Vision Pro brings TV, 3D movies to a massive, 100-foot-wide screen
A person is watching a movie using the Apple Vision Pro.

As expected, at WWDC 2023, Apple unveiled its first mixed-reality headset, the Apple Vision Pro. Among its many amazing features, Apple demonstrated what it will be like to watch TV and movies on the device, and the results look impressive. The headset is expected to be available in 2024, for $3,500.

Apple showed how the Vision Pro will let you open a virtual screen within your field of view that can be as small or as big as you want -- virtually speaking. At its largest size, Apple claims the screen can occupy a relative width of 100 feet.

Read more
Apple TV getting FaceTime, Memories screensaver, and remote finder
FaceTime on Apple TV.

Among the many other announcements at Apple's monster WWDC 2023 came three pretty serious improvements to the Apple TV platform. That is, with tvOS 17 on Apple TV hardware — not the app, or the Apple TV+ streaming service.

First, and probably the biggest, is that FaceTime is coming to Apple TV. As you've likely deduced already, FaceTime Video calls will still be implemented from something other than the Apple TV itself. But you'll use another Apple device — one with a camera, of course — to allow folks on the other end of the call to see you. And then you'll see them on the big screen.

Read more