If it's an individual, it could be as simple as portfolio cred ('look, I found and helped fix a security flaw in this program that's on millions of devices ')
It is 50mp camera still, otherwise you would not be able to increase quality by averaging those pixels.
I dont think anyone need 15000px noisy poor quality image over standard high res with good quality
Maybe it wasn't clear in my original comment. It sucks picture-quality-wise, and ON TOP of that, they use misleading messaging with their 50MP mode... Colour is washed out, focus is all over the place... I see no reason to buy a 6 before my 5 dies, which is funny because I can swap its components out indefinitely I guess...
Teflon is typically not the issue, it's very non-reactive and non-sticky (duh), meaning it just passes through.
Attaching such material to metal takes some serious chemistry, though.
That can be a bit misleading, I feel.
It depends on how well the layers are fused together, post-processing, or even the orientation of the print.
At best, it can be nearly as strong as a water bottle, but I wouldn't expect it to be.
The designer has created an animation in After Effects which has to play at some location on the web page. I can have the designer export a video and insert it that way, or I can convert the AE file to a Lotte animation. It looks the same to the user, so it's ultimately just a matter of bandwidth.
Are you sure Lottie + SDK is heavier than the mp4? For one or two animations that hasn't been my experience, especially if you can do WebM and fall back to optimized mp4.
This was at least six years ago. At the time, yes I'm pretty sure Lottie was a lot smaller. However, iirc we largely abandoned it in favor of videos anyway because the lottie animations wouldn't render correctly without additional work.
The less-abridged process was "the designer exports a ProRes video, and I (personally) spend an hour experimenting with different ffmpeg settings to get it as small as possible while retaining a level of quality the designers will accept."