Shall we create a redirect “Android Accessibility Suite” pointing to this article?

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While the article mentions that TalkBack is a component of the Android Accessibility Suite, it was actually just renamed as such. I noticed a red link referring to AAS, but I'm skeptical that there will be content to develop on it, as both terms refer to the same entity. That being said, Google continues to use the term TalkBack to this day (for instance, on Google Support). ―Eduardogobi (talk) 22:31, 11 September 2024 (UTC)Reply

Here's a shorter version: The wave theory of light explains interference, diffraction, and polarization, but fails to account for photoelectric emission's basic features: *Wave Theory Limitations:* 1. Assumes electrons absorb energy continuously, contradicting observations. 2. Predicts energy absorbed per electron should increase with radiation intensity, not observed. 3. Suggests electrons need hours to accumulate enough energy, opposing instantaneous emission observations. *Key Points:* - Wave theory can't explain photoelectric effect's instant emission. - Electron energy absorption contradicts wave theory predictions. - Observations contradict wave theory's continuous energy absorption assumption.

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Here's a shorter version:

The wave theory of light explains interference, diffraction, and polarization, but fails to account for photoelectric emission's basic features:

*Wave Theory Limitations:*

1. Assumes electrons absorb energy continuously, contradicting observations.

2. Predicts energy absorbed per electron should increase with radiation intensity, not observed.

3. Suggests electrons need hours to accumulate enough energy, opposing instantaneous emission observations.

*Key Points:*

- Wave theory can't explain photoelectric effect's instant emission.

- Electron energy absorption contradicts wave theory predictions.

- Observations contradict wave theory's continuous energy absorption assumption. 103.94.138.154 (talk) 15:53, 31 October 2024 (UTC)Reply