2016-02-08



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from Dave Voyles | Tech Evangelist at Microsoft.



In the past, I’ve been posting that week’s newsletter on here nearly immediately after it went out to your emails. What I’ve decided to do recently was send out the newsletter every TWO weeks instead of each week, and now post this once a month, thereby combining the newsletters.

Week 57

San Francisco Office Rents Pass Manhattan as Most Expensive in Country

A combination of the booming technology sector and tight supply of commercial real estate propelled average office rents that San Francisco landlords are asking for to $72.26 a square foot in the fourth quarter of last year, edging out the $71.85 a square foot in Manhattan, according to a new report from CBRE Group, a commercial real estate services and investment firm. The prices in San Francisco rose 14 percent last year, compared with 7 percent in Manhattan.

Angular 2 vs. React — There will be blood

Angular 2 has reached Beta and appears poised to become the hot new framework of 2016. It’s time for a showdown. Let’s see how it stacks up against 2015’s darling: React.

TIL that Solitaire was created by an intern while at Microsoft

And the original author chimes in, too. Great piece about his experience on craft this game for the PC.

Here’s a list of 221 free online programming/CS courses (MOOCs) with feedback(i.e. exams/homeworks/assignments) that you can start this month (Jan 2016)

I actually signed up for two Python courses through this. Fantastic resource.

Google’s Balloon Powered Internet for Everyone

The Project Loon is essentially an army of high-altitude balloons that aim to provide wireless internet to the population on the ground

The 25 best horror movies since 2000

Definitely some films that I agree with here, others…. I’m not quite sure. Was disappointed in The Babadook.

A massive collection of free dev ebooks courtesy of the @GitHub community

This is the largest collection I’ve seen in my life.

WebTorrent – World’s First BitTorrent Client For Your Web Browser, Written in JavaScript

WebTorrent is a BitTorrent client written for the web in JavaScript. It uses WebRTC for P2P transport and you don’t need any installation or plugin in your browser to use it. It’s a combination of BitTorrent technology and online video streaming with an aim to re-decentralize the web.

Follow along as a developer walks through the original Quake Source

I followed along as another developer created a game in C from scratch (Handmade Hero), so it will be interesting to see how another developer goes through the source for Quake and explains how all of this C code worked.

John Romero has released a new Doom WAD

The king himself, took two weeks in his free time to build this. I had the chance to watch him play Doom deathmatch at GDC last year, 1v1, and he was DESTROYING people.

Microsoft’s ioS bridge to Windows 10 is moving forward

Compile Objective-C to MSIL to run on Microsoft machines? Say whaaaaa?

Indie Dev Podcast, ep 24 – Kevin Giguere, Dragon Slumber

Kevin Giguère is a  programmer in his thirties from Quebec, Canada, and the man behind Dragon Slumber, a studio behind the SNES inspired  RPG Arelite Core, created with XNA.  Originally started as a dream project to create his own game from scratch, Kevin has done everything himself.

Indie Dev Podcast, ep 23 – Sean Colombo, Blueline Game Studio

Sean Colombo has been making games for 15 years. After quitting college to run web-startup “LyricWiki”, he sold the site to Wikia in 2009. A couple years later he founded BlueLine Games to focus on making digital versions of award-winning board games. BlueLine’s flagship games “Hive” and “Khet 2.0” are currently the top two rated board games* among the 80 that are on Steam.

Currently, BlueLine is working on the Steam version of a famous Euro-game and updating all four of it’s Steam titles which includes the free-to-play Simply Chess.

Week 58

The Sega Saturn and Transparency

The Sega Saturn is notorious for not being able to pull off transparency effects as well as its competitors. But the Saturn does do proper transparency effects as many games demonstrate. So why did so many developers so often settle on the “mesh” approach in their Saturn games?

Microsoft is changing how it invests in startups and has a new leader to help

Microsoft has launched a new strategic investment fund under the Microsoft Ventures name, and may consolidate its previous startup-investment programs underneath this new program.

To make this happen, Microsoft Ventures has a new boss, as first reported by Fortune earlier on Monday: Nagraj Kashyap, the former head of Qualcomm Ventures.

Epilis’ SoundCloud channel is all of the 8-bit covers you could ever want

The guy often covers classic 8-bit soundtracks and adds real life drum tracks to it. LOVE it. Ninja Gaiden, Thunderforcce, Street Fighter.

Meet the guy in charge of convincing people that Microsoft isn’t evil

This is the team I work on. Gives a great overview from Business Insider about what we do.

The Developer Experience team is intended to be the company’s public face among the techie set, parachuting in to help customers and partners with whatever problems they have — even if it’s a problem that doesn’t involve any Microsoft technology. It’s like a Genius Bar for the real geniuses. “We do this all free, which is kind of goofy,” says Shewchuk.

GameDev News – Week Ending January 22, 2016

My co-worker in Evangelism, @BrianPeek, does an incredible job of gathering the best stories in game dev each week.

“We Own You” – Confessions of a Free-to-play producer

The following article is from a game developer I’ve known for close to a decade now. To the best of my knowledge, from following iOS development since the launch of the App Store, it’s totally accurate. I’ve heard similar things from developers who have also gone through the ropes of hopping from one game studio to the next. This is the first time I’ve actually convinced someone to write about it.

Super Mario Sisters? At USC, women now outnumber men in video game design graduate program

Indie Dev Podcast, Ep 26 – Howard Dortch, Shawnee State University

Howard is an industry veteran who now works in academia at Shawnee State University’s game development program in Ohio. Before working in education, Howard had roles at AMD, as well as Sony, specifically at Verant in San Diego, where he worked on Everquest.

As someone who has spent a large amount of time playing this game during my middle and high-school years, I’m a huge fan. We discuss his time building lasers for the Department of Defense, writing assembly code to optimize Everquest, as well as finding work on BBS boards in the mid-90s.

Let’s play Shadowrun: Dragonfall

I recently started going through this game again, after having stopped last year. I backed the game on Kickstarter and got about 12 hours into it, but it was brutally difficult and often times just completely broken. For example, your entire party would be at full health, then in one round the enemy team would land crits and destroy your entire party. Start at the beginning of the stage — 2 hours back.

Now, there is an easier mode, as well as a save system which I can use at nearly any point, and not just at the beginning of each stage.

Revamped Indie Dev Podcast website

I migrated Indie Dev Podcast from WordPress.com to Azure (on SQL and no longer using MySQL!) using  Project Nami. vPurchased a new domain for this too. Looked at migrating from Podomatic for podcast hosting, too, so if you’ve got any suggestions….

I’m always looking to have new guests on here, so if you know of someone interesting to interview, please let me know!

I created a book recommendations page

I plan on updating this list as I continue to read. These books aren’t necessarily recommendations, but simply what I’ve read and my thoughts on them. I’ll often try to read both sides of the topic to get a better understanding of where the two meet. (Ex: Book from a Democrat then one from a Republican).

The post Links from my weekly newsletter (57 & 58) appeared first on Dave Voyles | Tech Evangelist at Microsoft.

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