Jan
9
2009
arcticstoat writes “AMD is planning to use over 1,000 Radeon HD 4870 GPUs to create a supercomputer capable of processing one petaflop, which the company says will make ‘cloud’ computing a reality. When it’s built later this year, the Fusion Render Cloud will be available as an online powerhorse for a variety of people, from gamers to 3D animators. The company claims that it could ‘deliver video games, PC applications and other graphically-intensive applications through the Internet “cloud” to virtually any type of mobile device with a web browser.’ The idea is that the Fusion Render Cloud will do all the hard work, so all you need is a machine capable of playing back the results, saving battery life and the need for ever greater processing power. AMD also says that the supercomputer will ‘enable remote real-time rendering of film and visual effects graphics on an unprecedented scale.’ Meanwhile, game developers would be able to use the supercomputer to quickly develop games, and also ‘serve up virtual world games with unlimited photo-realistic detail.’ The supercomputer will be powered by OTOY software, which allows you to render 3D visuals in your browser via streaming, compressed online data.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on AMD Plans 1,000-GPU Supercomputer For Games, Cloud | tags: cap, developer, games, google, Mac, mobile, web | posted in technical news
Jan
9
2009
Michael J. Ross writes “After installing and learning the basics of the content management system Drupal, many Web developers do not know how to best proceed from there. They may realize that much of the programming potential of Drupal — and thus the earning potential of Drupal developers — is derived from the use of community-contributed modules that greatly extend Drupal’s power. But there are thousands of such modules, with no objective direction as to which ones are best suited for particular tasks, and what bugs and other flaws could trip up the developer. These programmers need a thorough guide as to which modules are the most promising for the development of the most common types of Web sites. A new book, Using Drupal, aims to fill this need.” Keep reading for the rest of Michael’s review.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Using Drupal | tags: developer, google, program, programming, web | posted in technical news
Jan
8
2009
From gaming turning into a haven for babysitting software to developers calling out forum users, it was a strange time for our favorite hobby. Won’t you join us as we collectively hate the all-around worst parts of 2008? The worst games, trends and people from an otherwise groundbreaking year


Comments Off on The Worst Video Games, Trends and People of 2008 | tags: developer, games, google | posted in technical news
Jan
7
2009
So, legendary Japanese developer Hideo Kojima is starting from “zero” in 2009, and wants Kojima Productions on an equal footing with western studios. From the great man himself: “We’re currently reviewing everything – from the team structure to tools and our staff – in order to make Kojima Productions a team that can challenge everyone.”


Comments Off on The Westernification of Metal Gear Solid 5 | tags: developer, google, japan, japanese | posted in technical news
Jan
7
2009
BartlebyScrivener writes “The New York Times has an article on the R programming language. The Times describes it as: “a popular programming language used by a growing number of data analysts inside corporations and academia. It is becoming their lingua franca partly because data mining has entered a golden age, whether being used to set ad prices, find new drugs more quickly or fine-tune financial models. Companies as diverse as Google, Pfizer, Merck, Bank of America, the InterContinental Hotels Group and Shell use it.””

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on The Power of the R Programming Language | tags: developer, google, program, programming | posted in technical news
Jan
7
2009
Ever since the initial game was developed in the summer of 2007, it has managed to garner much press and acclaim, especially since developer Petri Purho revealed that he was working on a deluxe version that would include improved physics and more levels. Now Crayon Physics Deluxe has finally been released.


Comments Off on Crayon Physics brings out inner (physics-loving) child | tags: developer, google | posted in technical news
Jan
4
2009
On Elpeleg writes “The Perl Foundation has announced they are switching their version control systems to git. According to the announcement, Perl 5 migration to git would allow the language development team to take advantage of git’s extensive offline and distributed version support. Git is open source and readily available to all Perl developers. Among other advantages, the announcement notes that git simplifies commits, producing fewer administrative overheads for integrating contributions. Git’s change analysis tools are also singled out for praise. The transformation from Perforce to git apparently took over a year. Sam Vilain of Catalyst IT ‘spent more than a year building custom tools to transform 21 years of Perl history into the first ever unified repository of every single change to Perl.’ The git repository incorporates historic snapshot releases and patch sets, which is frankly both cool and historically pleasing. Some of the patch sets were apparently recovered from old hard drives, notching up the geek satisfaction factor even more. Developers can download a copy of the current Perl 5 repository directly from the perl.org site, where the source is hosted.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Perl Migrates To the Git Version Control System | tags: developer, google, open source | posted in technical news