There's no perfect filter and no perfect transmitter... correct. But the devices are required to accept reasonable interference and I guarantee that the 5g transmitters don't produce unreasonable interference. This is an issue, like has been said, of poorly manufactured/broken altimeters.
With the spread of 5G mid and high band home internet service I wonder if that might not cover enough ground at some point to make it worthwhile. Verizon is actually selling it as unlimited internet for a decent price. I don't know about other carriers.
It certainly won't cover anything out where I live. Even if they did put up a 5G antennae, it would cover maybe 2 houses on my street if they placed it strategically.
Is it 5 pounds and 2 inches thick? The fact is is that my M1 Macbook Air that was $1400 would cost at least $2000 from HP, Dell or Lenovo to even approach similar performance, and still have a worse screen, worse battery life, AND would still be slower. I have not seen a laptop chip from AMD or Intel in fanless, thin laptop like the Macbook Air that even gets close to the M1.
I was a Borland C++ Builder user back in version 3 through 5 (which correspond kind of closely to Delphi) and it was as lightweight and fast as a C++ IDE could be. I've used what it has become in version 10 and it's a disaster in comparison. It's massive, bloated, and nothing like the earlier IDEs that I remember. I've read that they have laid off/fired most of their in house staff and outsourced most of the work.
I don't know about the author's intent but licensed content seems to be one of the strongest reasons to use an API. Some translations have their own (esv.org for instance) but not all do. Unfortunately getting permission to add a translation to such an API is difficult at best and others have tried.
They already have it so that you can order by phone. A touchpad/kiosk type thing would make perfect sense too except maybe it required more hardware than they wanted to spend money on?