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Tilt and shift lenses offer tremendous creative possibilities for
users of digital SLR and mirrorless cameras. This practical book
explains the techniques that will help you take better photos -
photos that don't distort or lose focus. Assessing the benefits and
pitfalls of a range of lenses, adapters, software and editing
techniques, it guides you through the practicalities of working
with these lenses and gives you the skills to use them to best
effect. With stunning examples throughout, this book gives an
overview of the different lenses available, and tips on how
adapters can give tilt/shift options when using old medium-format
lenses. It gives advice on how simple lens shift can change the
entire look of your photos, and techniques for using lens tilt for
focus control and close-up working. Stunning examples show the use
of tilt and shift lenses across a range of available focal lengths,
both tripod-mounted and handheld.
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Languages and Compilers for Parallel Computing - 23rd International Workshop, LCPC 2010, Houston, TX, USA, October 7-9, 2010. Revised Selected Papers (Paperback, Edition.)
Keith Cooper, John Mellor-Crummey, Vivek Sarkar
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R1,468
Discovery Miles 14 680
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This book constitutes the thoroughly refereed post-proceedings of
the 23rd International Workshop on Languages and Compilers for
Parallel Computing, LCPC 2010, held in Houston, TX, USA, in October
2010. The 18 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed
and selected from 47 submissions. The scope of the workshop spans
foundational results and practical experience, and targets all
classes of parallel platforms including concurrent, multithreaded,
multicore, accelerated, multiprocessor, and cluster systems
In 1974 a message was beamed towards the stars by the giant Arecibo
telescope in Puerto Rico, a brief blast of radio waves designed to
alert extraterrestrial civilisations to our existence. Of course,
we don't know if such civilisations really exist. For the past six
decades a small cadre of researchers have been on a quest to find
out, as part of SETI, the search for extraterrestrial intelligence.
So far, SETI has found no evidence of extraterrestrial life, but
with more than a hundred billion stars in our Galaxy alone to
search, the odds of quick success are stacked against us. The
silence from the stars is prompting some researchers to transmit
more messages into space, in an effort to provoke a response from
any civilisations out there that might otherwise be staying quiet.
However, the act of transmitting raises troubling questions about
the process of contact. In The Contact Paradox, author Keith Cooper
looks at how far SETI has come since its modest beginnings, and
where it is going, by speaking to the leading names in the field
and beyond. SETI forces us to confront our nature in a way that we
seldom have before - where did we come from, where are we going,
and who are we in the cosmic context of things? This book considers
the assumptions that we make in our search for extraterrestrial
life, and explores how those assumptions can teach us about
ourselves.
The quest to find a theory of quantum gravity that could
potentially explain everything. Nearly 60 years ago, Nobel
Prize-winners Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson stumbled across a
mysterious hiss of faint radio static that was interfering with
their observations. They had found the key to unravelling the story
of the Big Bang and the origin of our universe. That signal was the
Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB), the earliest light in the
universe, released 379,000 years after the Big Bang. It contains
secrets about what happened during the very first tiny increments
of time, which had consequences that have rippled throughout cosmic
history, leading to the universe of stars and galaxies that we live
in today. This is the enthralling story of the quest to understand
the CMB radiation and what it can tell us of the origins of time
and space, from bubble universes to a cyclical cosmos - and
possibly leading to the elusive theory of quantum gravity itself.
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Nope
Jordan Peele
Blu-ray disc
R132
Discovery Miles 1 320
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