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I expected the following usage of hasOnlyOneElementSatisfying to pass - perhaps the current implementation would be better described as hasOnlyOneElementAndSatisfies?
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Why does using a tilt-shift lens make things look miniature?
This question isn't so much about how to achieve the effect of making a scene look like it's modelled in miniature, but why tilting the focal plane creates the effect. What is it about photographing miniatures that makes them look like miniatures, and how is this replicated by tilting the focal plane?
I can understand how when photographing a model of a scene, you have a much higher magnification, which leads to a shallower depth of field compared to when capturing the real-sized scene, but how does tilting the focal plane help? Is it just that you have the focal plane tilted relative to the plane that most of your subject is on, so that you can achieve a narrower depth of field for the focal length and aperture, or is there more to it than that?
How Homakov hacked GitHub and how to protect your application
##How Homakov hacked GitHub and the line of code that could have prevented it
Please note: THIS ARTICLE IS NOT WRITTEN BY THE GITHUB TEAM or in any way associated with them. It's simply hosted as a Gist because the markdown formatting is excellent and far clearer than anything I could manage on my personal Tumblr at peternixey.com.
If you'd like to follow me on twitter my handle is @peternixey
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