Honor Magic 6 Pro
Boulanger.com
€1,149.00Nine
HONOR Magic6 Pro Smartphone Green
€1,149.00Nine
HONOR Magic6 Pro Smartphone Black
€1,149.00Nine
Rakuten
€1,149.00Nine
Fnac.com
€1,149.90Nine
Smartphone Honor Magic6 Pro 6.8″ 5G Dual nano SIM 512 GB Black
€1,149.90Nine
Smartphone Honor Magic6 Pro 6.8″ 5G Dual nano SIM 512 GB Green
€1,149.90Nine
Darty.com
€1,149.90Nine
Honor Magic6 Pro Smartphone Black
€1,149.90Nine
Honor Magic6 Pro Smartphone Green
€1,149.90Nine
Amazon
€1,299.90Nine
Honor
€1,299.90Nine
HONOR Magic6 Pro Epi Green,12+512GB,Snapdragon 8 Gen 3,NanoCrystal Shiel…
€1,299.90Nine
HONOR Magic6 Pro Black, 12+512GB, Snapdragon 8 Gen 3, NanoCrystal Shield, 5…
€1,299.90Nine
How the pricing table works
Turn off your ad blocker to access all of the links above.
Honor took advantage of the MWC in Barcelona to launch its latest flagship, the Magic 6 Pro, on the European market. Already available in China and passed through our labs, the Chinese firm’s new smartphone should quickly accommodate new features, including so-called eye tracking technology, which aims to determine precisely where on the screen the user is looking, thus allowing you to control an application. This function, called Magic Capsule, gave rise to a surprising demonstration in a hangar located in the city center.
In order to prove the effectiveness of this new eye tracking technology based on AI and the use of the TOF sensor, usually used for facial unlocking, Honor allows testers to move a car with a simple glance. After a simple calibration process, users can perform various actions, such as starting or stopping the car’s engine, moving it forward or backward, by fixing the corresponding command on the smartphone screen.
If this functionality is unlikely to be deployed in the vehicle fleet in the near future, autonomous cars having no place on French roads at the moment, it nevertheless opens the way to numerous uses. We can easily imagine being able to scroll through our news feed on social networks while cooking, using only our eyes, or even allowing disabled or paralyzed people to communicate. One more step towards increased accessibility, beyond the simple technical demo.