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" ... In Apple’s defence, a triple array camera is good news. The combination of primary, zoom and ultra wide-angle lenses has been popularised by Huawei and Samsung and gives users great flexibility. ... "
" ... Judging on appearances, the San Diego has the usual playing-card shape popularised by the iPhone 3GS (and many others). It does not look, or feel, like an expensive phone - the entire body is plastic, with a clear screen over the piano-black front, which has four soft buttons built into the bottom strip and a front-facing camera at the top. ... "
" ... The myth that the Church suppressed science and burned or repressed scientists is a central part of what historians of science refer to as "the Conflict Thesis". This persistent idea has its origins in the Enlightenment, but was fixed in the public consciousness by two popular works of the Nineteenth Century. John William Draper's A History of the Conflict Between Religion and Science (1874) and Andrew Dickson White's A History of the Warfare of Science with Theology (1896) were both highly popular and influential works which popularised the idea that the Medieval Church actively suppressed science. Twentieth Century historians of science have since heavily criticised the "White-Draper Thesis" and noted that much of White and Draper's evidence was wildly misinterpreted or, in several cases, totally invented. ... "
" ... The rise of Robotic Process Process (RPA) software has of course popularised the term bot, being short for software robot as it is. But while there are bot RPA purist vendors out there, it hasn’t stopped many other firms from attempting to position prepackaged morsels of their codebases and referring to them as some form of bot-based RPA. ... "
" ... The term “technological unemployment” was popularised in the 1930s by the celebrated economist John Maynard Keynes. Fifty years later, another renowned economist called Wassily Leontief warned that jobs for humans might follow the same path that jobs for horses did in the early 20th century. So the idea has a respectable economic heritage, but economists are still arguing about whether it will actually happen. ... "