video game programs
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- Joined: Sun Nov 03, 2002 9:34 pm
video game programs
is ther any free or trail basic video game programs available to download
- Stoic
- Joined: Fri Feb 14, 2003 12:23 am
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That do what?
"More than hundred fucking takes." - Jackie Chan.
Murphy's Law of Combat Number 6:
If it's stupid but it works, it isn't stupid.
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Murphy's Law of Combat Number 6:
If it's stupid but it works, it isn't stupid.
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- Stoic
- Joined: Fri Feb 14, 2003 12:23 am
- Location: Land Of Confusion
RIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIGHT.... Or you could you know buy a book...
And if you really want to make video games (but you might want to edit ram) you should also learn Direct X.
And Java is the devil.
And if you really want to make video games (but you might want to edit ram) you should also learn Direct X.

And Java is the devil.

"More than hundred fucking takes." - Jackie Chan.
Murphy's Law of Combat Number 6:
If it's stupid but it works, it isn't stupid.
My Profile::Your Profile
Murphy's Law of Combat Number 6:
If it's stupid but it works, it isn't stupid.
My Profile::Your Profile
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- is
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- y2kwizard
- Joined: Sun Aug 18, 2002 2:54 pm
- Location: Memphis, TN
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There's a few points in that article I take issue with. Yes, I know who Paul Graham is, and I do respect his skills, but there's some passages in this article that seem funky:y2kwizard wrote:Actually, tryhil, he's right to a point.
http://www.paulgraham.com/paulgraham/javacover.html
(1) Graham admits that (a) he's only glanced over reference books above Java, and (b) that his critique is not of Java per se, but of a totally different subject. Therefore, this doesn't really make much of a rebuttal.
Well, let's just assume that it's a rebuttal. Here's a few counterpoints:
(2) Yes, Java has been hyped. A lot. However, that doesn't explain why it's gradually finding a comfortable place in universities. As a point of comparison, Microsoft's C# is also getting hyped, but it's not getting the same type of acceptance. I find that this point doesn't speak much of Java's merits (as it probably wasn't meant to do, anyway).
(3) Yes, it was aimed low -- a lot of people say that Java was designed for TV set-top boxes for Internet TV and the like. However, you could say that for nearly any computer language existing today, since they all originated on compartively low-power hardware.
Graham says that Java was designed to be easier to grasp than C -- well, so what? That's probably part of what makes it a cleanly designed language. See my point.
(4) I'll grant that I've never heard of anyone say that they love Java, while I have heard a lot of people say that they love C, C++, and I've heard way too many people say that they love Objective-C, Smalltalk, Perl, and LISP. I'll also grant that I'm being forced to use Java.
I don't see how that invalidates any of my points, though.