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SAGD – A Website Dedicated For South African Game Development Community

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SAGD is a site dedicated to the South African game development community. They strive to bring the community the latest news and a place where they can discuss game development and related topics. It is very fascinating that South Africa has a high level of technical content to have a site dedicated for games and not just watching movies. This is the future because making games is not easy. You need to master a lot of things and this seems to be moving to the creative side of entertainment. A brief exploration of some of the games are:

 

  • UnChaos and CSS

    UnChaos can now generate a CSS file for the sprite sheet. A class is created for each image on the sprite sheet. Go here to download the latest version (or to find out more about UnChaos): http://www.diorgo.com/v1/?p=198 Below is an example of a sprite sheet and the CSS file created by UnChaos. The grey rectangles in the background represent the transparent […]

  • Beasts Update: Rook and Pawn

    Ok, the Rook and Pawn meshes for the Beasts side have been finished for a while and sitting around begging to be shown, so I finally decided to finish off the HD renders and actually post them. here we have the finished Ogre (Rook) HD mesh: This guy has all the finesse of a drunk elephant. He’ll obviously enter into diplomatic discourse and use that menacing […]

  • Thursday Art Update

    Art time again. The main thing this week is an illustration of my mate’s Darksun D&D character. Bit of a (fun) challenge, as it’s a break from my usual regime of studies (drawing from life/photo refs etc) to construction from imagination (where you can/should look to refs for inspiration, but not directly copy them). So it’s essentially a test of of what […]

  • Street Sorcery Build 0.03

    Build 3 is up. http://www.scarsofwargame.com/downloads/StreetSorcery/Builds/ Not a lot to see this time, most of the work I did this last week was non-coding. I reworked the card game design quite a bit. I’d gone too kitchen-sink with it, there were a few too many stats for a card game. Card games need strategic depth in terms of what combos you can setup an […]

  • STASIS in the IGM Magazine

    I was lucky enough to have a preview of STASIS in the IGM Magazine a few months ago. Here is a copy of the article. A very big thanks to David Bruggink for the opportunity! IGM – Stasis Preview DOWNLOAD ME. http://www.indiegamemag.com Here is the unedited interview. Some info has changed since this, but it does give some nice incite into the game. . What are […]

  • New Dirchie Kart Menu System

    This week I knocked up some new menu graphics for Dirchie Kart – World Tour, I’ve been focusing on

Are You Ready? Stanford University Makes Its Artificial Intelligence Course FREE

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A bold experiment in distributed education, “Introduction to Artificial Intelligence” will be offered free and online to students worldwide during the fall of 2011. The course will include feedback on progress and a statement of accomplishment. Taught by Sebastian Thrun and Peter Norvig, the curriculum draws from that used in Stanford’s introductory Artificial Intelligence course. The instructors will offer similar materials, assignments, and exams.

 

Artificial Intelligence is the science of making computer software that reasons about the world around it. Humanoid robots, Google Goggles, self-driving cars, even software that suggests music you might like to hear are all examples of AI. In this class, you will learn how to create this software from two of the leaders in the field. Class begins October 10.

 

Details on the course, including a syllabus is available here. Sign up above to receive additional information about participating in the online version when it becomes available.

Apple Increases Production of iPhones In Anticipation Of Massive End Of Year Sales

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According to reports from Taiwan Apple has just increased its orders for manufacturing iPhones in anticipation of massive sales at the end of the year. Earlier this year Apple had ordered the production of 50 million iPhones, including the 3GS and iPhone 4, but has since informed its suppliers that it would like this increased to 56 million.

 

Some of these new orders will be for the new iPhone 5. Apple is expected to order around 26 million iPhone 5?s into production by Christmas, although only around 6 million of them will go on sale in Q3. This seems to be a tactic Apple is employing to create huge demand for the new phone to start off with by limiting supply, and then flooding the market in time for Christmas.

 

Q3 production levels for the iPhone 5 were initially going to be 1 million higher although they have been dropped with the recent revisions. However, they have not simply been pushed back a few months as Q4 production levels have been increased by about 6 million, much more than the Q3 reductions.

 

In contrast, older models of the iPhone including the 3GS and iPhone 4 will see a spike in production in Q3 and then a huge drop off in the last quarter. This increase in production will mean that roughly 95 million iPhones will have been shipped by the end of 2011 and seem to suggest that Apple are expecting great things with the iPhone 5.

HSBC Decides To Exit U.S. Credit Card Business – To Focus On Emerging Markets

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HSBC agreed to sell its U.S. credit-card unit as it tries to focus on emerging markets. Capital One, which recently agreed to buy ING‘s U.S. online bank, will pay a $2.6 billion premium for the acquisition above the value of the unit’s existing consumer-loan balances.

 

The sale continues the pullback from consumer banking by HSBC, which on July 31 agreed to sell almost half its U.S. retail branches, largely in New York. HSBC acquired the credit-card in 2003 when it bought sub-prime lender Household International.

 

HSBC Holdings plc is a global banking and financial services company headquartered in Canary Wharf, London, United Kingdom. As of 2011 it is the world’s second-largest banking and financial services group and second-largest public company according to a composite measure by Forbes magazine. It has many branches in Africa and other emerging and developing markets.

From Homo Sapiens To Homo Nety – Technology Has Disrupted All Aspects Of Living

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We live in an era of unusual disruption of cultures, lives and businesses by technologies. As a little boy, I listened to folklore under the moonlight in my south eastern part of Nigerian village. The elders told the stories of justice, bravery, honor and humanity. There was no cellphone and there was no distraction. Life was under a predictable pattern especially in the evenings when boys and girls will wait in turns to play under the moonlight and receive moral education carefully orchestrated in the stories told by the elders. Every child belongs to the village and parents are nothing but stewards.

As we trekked miles to fetch water and firewood for the family cooking, we enjoyed the songs of the happy birds. We treasured the flowers and the gentle winds out of the thick rainforest of our stream. It was a life of great tranquility and we never had a homicide in the village. By norms and traditions, the fishes in our stream must not be fished. They were preserved and in most cases we played with them.

When it was time for school, we continued on that village tradition of brotherhood. The elders have mapped out lands in the village where people could go and plant fruits so that any villager when hungry could go there and eat. It was forbidden to sell anything from that land because it was designed to be a ‘strategic food reserve’. It worked; I planted an orange tree and my best friend gave the village a coconut tree.

But that was then. Many things have since changed, not just in my village, but around the world. Technology is disrupting all aspects of human existence and our lifestyles have changed. Industries are being demised and new ones are coming up with our lexicons constantly evolving to accommodate new tech-evolutions.

Food has been professionalized and mamas do not need to know how to cook. Technology and globalization have already changed family traditions.

As a boy, I heard of professional typists. These were specially trained pros who could churn out characters on typewriters at amazing speed. There are few of them today. There were shorthand experts; people that could write on special characters in order to capture statements as fast as they are spoken by their employers.

Many of these professions have since gone or are going. Technology is displacing their services. Computers make mastering of typing not a big deal since it does not cost anything to edit and delete when using word processors. Compare that with erasing and changing stencils in a typewriter, you will appreciate the level of innovation that has taken place. A single mistake in page could render the whole document useless; the typist has to start over, especially in quality documents where erasure is not permitted. So the trade was to get people that could type with zero error, and at fast speed.

For those that are shorthand experts, video recorders with translation capability make it unnecessary to be writing when a politician or anyone is talking. Just record and soon print out the transcripts. Those experts are also fading. It is rare to see a journalist job that requires mastering of shorthand as Isaac Pitman invented it.

Have you noticed that the city of London could police the whole city through video cameras when in the old dull days, policemen might have been used? Those traffic policemen we used to see across many African cities are disappearing as most of the cities install traffic light systems. Those jobs or careers are being displayed by technology.

What of language interpreters? I recall a meeting in Kenya where someone was giving a speech in French and the interpreters were interpreting in English, Arabic and Portuguese. It worked out so well. But that career will soon die. If Apple or any of the Smartphone makers develop a good language translator in their gizmos, we may not need the interpreters, at least, in some gatherings.

So, we have got a lot of challenges in career planning these days. Does it make sense to pursue this career considering how technology could change it in the future? How many ticket masters were displaced when airplane ticketing moved online? How can software affect journalism in the future? How is technology affecting parenting since technology is increasingly displacing our attention to our families? Those late night emails and constant trips to the Blackberries at 10pm are all disruptions.

Planning for careers is not just focusing on what happens today or maybe in two years time. You must have a feel of where technology is going and then anticipate and stay ahead in your career. A business model to open physical bookshops may not be a good idea since most people rarely care to know the bookshop around their neighborhood these days. The first point is order from ebay, Amazon or BN. The local bookstore is model already endangered. The same goes with building cinema halls. In the next ten years, we will have virtual cinema halls where movie releases will be done online without the need of going to that physical location.

The interesting thing about this technology disruption on careers is that it does not matter what your level of education is. It could be that your industry is booming but has moved out of your locality. That brings the degree to which your field is outsourced. The easier your job can be automated by technology, the higher is the risk of technology displacement.

So when people discuss about career planning, it is very imperative that you understand how technology and not just wages could play out in the future. If you specialize in a special type of engine design and from all trends, it is evident that that engine is going to be obsolete and you refuse to adapt and be retrained, you could be in trouble. Ask the expert photographers that made fortune washing and developing films in dark rooms. Those that failed to move to digital photography are only in history books.

Our world has been made better by technology because it improves our productivity and standard of living. However, it also carries a major challenge; disrupting careers and moving many jobs to museums. It is very important you stay ahead and see how new technologies could disrupt and displace your job. Never wait, plan ahead and stay above technology innovation with new skills.