A Perusal of Game Engines and APIs

by Jon 9/15/2007 3:58:00 PM

Today at Desert Code Camp I presented a session called A Perusal of Game Engines and APIs.  This was totally just for fun (I'm not a game developer! .. but I tinker ..)

Fun as it was supposed to be, I took some vacation time to make it happen, and I got through it (and did a moderately decent job I suppose, for getting only two hours of sleep due to cramming), but not without some hair-pulling and the near-shedding of tears.

I covered mostly open-source stuff but also the obvious stuff (including commercial bits) one can find right off the Internet. Here is my PowerPoint 2007 presentation:

http://www.jondavis.net/misc/A_Perusal_of_Game_Engines_and_APIs.pptx

One minor error I made is that I forgot about XInput (which in XNA deprecates DirectInput). I also was not certain about XACT as to whether it complements DirectSound or obsoletes it outright, but I did give a nod to XACT's asset management tool.

Now if you'll all excuse me, I need to get some sleep and prepare for tomorrow's session, An Introduction to Microsoft XNA. (More cramming...  *sigh* )

Related posts

Add comment


(Will show your Gravatar icon)  

  Country flag





Live preview

11/21/2008 5:09:41 AM


 

Powered by BlogEngine.NET 1.2.0.0
Theme by Mads Kristensen

About the author

Jon Davis Jon Davis (aka "stimpy77") has been a programmer, developer, and consultant for web and Windows software solutions professionally since 1997, with experience ranging from OS and hardware support to DHTML programming to IIS/ASP web apps to Java network programming to Visual Basic applications to C# desktop apps.
 
Software in all forms is also his sole hobby, whether playing PC games or tinkering with programming them. "I was playing Defender on the Commodore 64," he reminisces, "when I decided at the age of 12 or so that I want to be a computer programmer when I grow up."
 
Jon is currently in a temp-to-perm contract with a media corporation that primarily produces B2B magazines. The insanely complete and powerful Content Management System that they are switching to is SiteCore CMS, which is arguably the richest and most complete ASP.NET 3.5 based CMS on the planet.
E-mail me Send mail

Most Recent of Many Library Investments

Calendar

<<  November 2008  >>
MoTuWeThFrSaSu
272829303112
346789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
1234567

View posts in large calendar

Pages

    Recent comments

    Authors

    Tags

    Disclaimer

    The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in anyway.

    © Copyright 2008

    Sign in