Most new content on Netflix is 4K and HDR (Dolby Vision), and a ton of YouTube content is 4K due to many handheld devices recording in 4K now. HDR, on the other hand, is harder to find outside of Netflix.
This would be a great type of service for news publishers. Digital producers often have to type out summaries (bullets) in stories for those who don't bother reading full articles. If it could be automated by sending the story copy via an API and getting back summary bullets, it would certainly be valuable.
It's about time someone shut these sensationalist scientists up. I was getting tired of the constant conflicting reports. Unless you can refute a 15-year longitudinal study with a longer study and a more concrete conclusion, keep your mouth shut.
While this study is great, you seem to be under the impression that science is so cut and dry when it comes to disproving theories. A shorter study with the right constraints could easily disagree with this one and warrant further investigation. While I find it highly unlikely that cell phones are cancer-causing agents, there's no reason to simply say "great, we've solved it, let's stop looking at this." That's not how science should or does work, when you're talking about something like this.
If you have a faster processor working on a smaller core, doesn't that mean that if you underclock it, you will get better battery performance -- more bang for the juice?
The only problem with Android and battery life is the way it manages services and how it deals with services that abuse the processor. An app such as Watchdog, combined with JuiceDefender fixes the issue. On my Galaxy S II, I can go to bed with 98% battery and wake up with 98% battery. The processor is set to 200Mhz at sleep and any service using more than 1% of the processor is automatically killed (unless I want it to run)