HEY Girl Geeks at Hull
/The Girl Geek movement in Hull is going from strength to strength. Their next event is on May 4th. You can find out more here. They also have a Twitter feed: http://twitter.com/HEYGGD
Rob Miles on the web. Also available in Real Life (tm)
The Girl Geek movement in Hull is going from strength to strength. Their next event is on May 4th. You can find out more here. They also have a Twitter feed: http://twitter.com/HEYGGD
Micro-Mart, a weekly UK magazine about computing has a really good item about XNA and Indie game development in it this week. Starts at page 92. Well worth a read (as is the whole magazine actually).
Of course I’m only really telling you about it it because I’m actually mentioned (and even quoted) in the article.
Cletus Clay, in the flesh at Platform 2010
Yesterday at Hull Platform 2010 we had a really good talk from Sarah Web who told us all about Cletus Clay, a new videogame which is being made using “Claymation” animation. This looks absolutely fantastic, with lots of down home humour and cow abducting aliens. You can find out all about Cletus, and even discover how to build some of the game characters yourself at http://www.cletusclay.com/
I am definitely going to get a copy of this game when it comes out…
If you want to see what people can do with new, shiny, technology you should take a look at the Wotudo site. It has a whole bunch of really interesting/useful articles along with source code, neatly categorised into useful chunks and able to be asset stripped for parts of your projects.
Great stuff.
I’m going to be doing quite a lot of speaking in the next month or so. Good thing I know lots of jokes.……
Anyhoo, in a couple of weeks or so, on March 25th, I’ll be treading the boards at Platform 2010, which is a digital gaming event in Hull. It is at the spiffy new Hull Truck theatre and they have some really good speakers lined up. And me.
It is free to attend, so if you are in the neighbourhood and want to take part you should head over to here and register your interest via the “Contact Us” link.
This post and video is amazing. I don’t think many people would build a centrifuge in their living room just to find out if a lava lamp would work on Jupiter.
The Girl Geek Dinners at Hull are going from strength to strength. We started them a while back and their next event is scheduled for next week on Thursday 11th March at Hive in our department. Girl Geek students from the university can even register at a discount. For the event details and a programme for the evening you can go here:
Microsoft are doing this deal at the moment for where for every 10 searches you make using Bing they will donate 5 pence to Sport Relief. This means that you are doing good and raising money for charity just by searching the web. Which you would do anyway. Works for me, even though I had to download and install a little app to count the searches.
The thing that amazes me is that the memory card on the left has a thousand times the capacity of the one on the right. And this advance took place in five years or so. Amazing.
If you are interested in the slightly murky world of memory chips and hardware manufacture you will find this post from one of the engineers behind the Chumby very interesting.
If you want to get ahead, get a blog. Last week I reported that Iain had started blogging, and today I’m pleased to be able to tell you that Tom Hulton-Harrop is now also blogging. Tom is one of our final year students, very into programming and XNA.
Iain Kelwick, the Manager of SeedSoftware has started a blog. This is a proper technical blog which will have genuinely useful things in it. The kind of thing I aspired to before I started going on about CSI and Silent Witness. You can find his first posts here:
The Human Clock project is a really neat idea. The creator is taking pictures from all over the world which contain the time and then using them to make a clock from all the different images. You can submit your own images on their web site, and if the author approves you can get a tiny slice of sort-of immortality. I’ve just sent the picture above. I’ve no idea how busy the 3:10 pm slot is (you can find out how many photos they have for each time) but you never know…
How good are you at spotting phishing emails? Take a test here.
http://www.sonicwall.com/phishing/
(I got 9 out of 10 – which is nice)
If you are making use of your Dreamspark access to get hold of lovely free Microsoft software then you might have noticed that a lot of the good stuff arrives as ISO disk images. The idea is that you burn these images to disk and then install the software on them.
However, if you have a netbook with no CD-ROM drive, or are simply in a hurry I can recommend IsoBuster. This tool lets you copy files from ISO images onto your hard disk or memory key so that you can install programs from the disks without needing a physical disk.
There is a copy you can pay for, but I’m told that the free version will do all you need to get hold files from a disk image. IsoBuster is also useful if you have a damaged disk that you need to recover.
Thanks for all your constructive reponses. Boss reccomends Virtual CloneDrive which also looks rather good.
I really like the idea of this.
I really want one of these. I’m not surprised they have sold out.
While we were in Berlin we went into the gift shop attached to Legoland Berlin. One new Lego product is the Lego nameplate. It comes with a bunch of shapes and an alphabet design you can use to make letters:
If you want one of your own you can find it here.
danah boyd (deliberate lower case here) is a researcher who ponders how the networks are changing our lives and the way we do things.
She is the co-author of a book which contains a set of case studies that investigate how different people live, learn and work around the networks of the 21st century. I’ve just started working my way through it, and I’m finding it very interesting.
Rob Miles is technology author and educator who spent many years as a lecturer in Computer Science at the University of Hull. He is also a Microsoft Developer Technologies MVP. He is into technology, teaching and photography. He is the author of the World Famous C# Yellow Book and almost as handsome as he thinks he is.
Begin to Code with JavaScript is now available for purchase and download. You can find it here