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Dave Mitchell came all the way from Seattle during his Thanksgiving holiday to talk with students at the XNA tour. He is a director at Microsoft for XNA, and he certainly knows his stuff. Dave gave the opening keynote of the XNA European Tour, where he talked about the "Ongoing Democratization of Game Development." It's an excellent overview of how the games industry is changing and opening up. It's not a country club anymore - XNA allows anyone to play in this space, just like sites such as YouTube
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Dave Mitchell came all the way from Seattle during his Thanksgiving holiday to talk with students at the XNA tour. He is a director at Microsoft for XNA, and he certainly knows his stuff. Dave gave the opening keynote of the XNA European Tour, where he talked about the "Ongoing Democratization of Game Development." It's an excellent overview of how the games industry is changing and opening up. It's not a country club anymore - XNA allows anyone to play in this space, just like sites such as YouTube
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Rob Miles is a Microsoft MVP, and as he says in his highly entertaining talk below - it's what all Microsoft Student Partners should aspire to be. Watch as Rob tells bad jokes and demos XNA Game Studio on his MacBook Pro. I laughed out loud at his descriptions of *alternative* games like "Hide the Controller" and "Controller Racing." Enjoy! Technorati Tags: XNA Game Studio 2.0 , XNA , Microsoft , Video Game Development
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Rob Miles is a Microsoft MVP, and as he says in his highly entertaining talk below - it's what all Microsoft Student Partners should aspire to be. Watch as Rob tells bad jokes and demos XNA Game Studio on his MacBook Pro. I laughed out loud at his descriptions of *alternative* games like "Hide the Controller" and "Controller Racing." Enjoy! Technorati Tags: XNA Game Studio 2.0 , XNA , Microsoft , Video Game Development Cross posted from Martha's Blog
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Back in November, Dublin was host to an event called the XNA Game Studio Tour. It was a full day jam-packed with superb XNA experts talking about the upcoming XNA Game Studio 2.0 release, showing off features and real-life examples of XNA applications and games. Liam (pictured below in the video) was kind enough to pass along videos of the event so that we could share it with more people, as the presenters were all quite good! I took some time this week and turned them into Silverlight applications,
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Yesterday in Trinity College something landed. Something big. Something new and fun. Something that might keep me up late at night... The XNA European Tour began right here in Dublin, filling two 150-person lecture halls for the entire day with 300+ students and game developers. In fact we had been expecting half of that, but as registrations came pouring in, Steve Collins, a lecturer at Trinity, was able to put together an additional room and have the speakers do morning and afternoon sessions!
Posted to Martha Rotter's Blog (Weblog) by martharotter on November 27, 2007
Filed under: technology, Microsoft, academic, students, events, developer, Dublin, Ireland, XNA, videoGames, gaming
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On Monday I went to Cork to visit students at UCC. Despite some technical difficulties involving scheduling and room changes, Microsoft Student Partners Nathan Forde and Sarah Fitzgerald managed to get together a great crowd! We spent about a half hour talking about Silverlight and its framework and then another half hour playing Pong and discussing building an XNA game. I had a couple of questions I promised I would post on my blog, so here they are: 1) What does the networking support look like
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On Monday I went to Cork to visit students at UCC. Despite some technical difficulties involving scheduling and room changes, Microsoft Student Partners Nathan Forde and Sarah Fitzgerald managed to get together a great crowd! We spent about a half hour talking about Silverlight and its framework and then another half hour playing Pong and discussing building an XNA game. I had a couple of questions I promised I would post on my blog, so here they are: 1) What does the networking support look like
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