ThePentiumGuy Posted March 26, 2004 Posted March 26, 2004 hey guys, check out this link: www.Microsoft.com/XNA i heard somewhere that you can develop with this to create Xbox games :-D what are your opinions on this? ( i know there isnt a lot of info out :p) Quote My VB.NET Game Programming Tutorial Site (GDI+, Direct3D, Tetris [coming soon], a full RPG.... you name it!) vbprogramming.8k.com My Project (Need VB.NET Programmers) http://workspaces.gotdotnet.com/ResolutionRPG
samsmithnz Posted March 26, 2004 Posted March 26, 2004 bring it on i say. it looks very interesting. Quote Thanks Sam http://www.samsmith.co.nz
iebidan Posted March 26, 2004 Posted March 26, 2004 Microsoft said a couple days ago that they'll be creating a common development platform for game development, so yes, looks like this XNA will be used too to develop games for the XBox or for a PC running Windows Quote Fat kids are harder to kidnap
samsmithnz Posted March 26, 2004 Posted March 26, 2004 Close, but apparently this XNA will be multiplatform, meaning that your code will work on the Xbox AND your pc. They are building a large amount of redunancy into it so that its super back compabilble... probably like the .net framework 1.0 and 1.1 :p Quote Thanks Sam http://www.samsmith.co.nz
Menge Posted March 26, 2004 Posted March 26, 2004 i just find it interesting (VERY, in fact) that the X-Box 2 will be a PowerPC and the PC is x86.... and that they supposedly will be integrated by that.... Quote Menge
ThePentiumGuy Posted April 3, 2004 Author Posted April 3, 2004 i just find it interesting (VERY' date=' in fact) that the X-Box 2 will be a PowerPC and the PC is x86.... and that they supposedly will be integrated by that....[/quote'] whats an x86? Quote My VB.NET Game Programming Tutorial Site (GDI+, Direct3D, Tetris [coming soon], a full RPG.... you name it!) vbprogramming.8k.com My Project (Need VB.NET Programmers) http://workspaces.gotdotnet.com/ResolutionRPG
Menge Posted April 3, 2004 Posted April 3, 2004 x86 is the pc ibm architecture. powerpc is the G3/4/5 architecture (which is oddly enough done by IBM lol) Quote Menge
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