@JohnHaugeland yup, John K is correct - you can submit multiple apps to Apptivate which makes you doubly eligible to win prizes. and I do work for Stack Exchange, so I've got most of the info on this project (and what info I don't have I can work on getting from our contacts at microsoft)
Yes, I have heard the same, but I do not care about fancy tiles. I would just like the application to launch and run, even if it needs a metro wrapper.
Does anybody know if there is a way to connect to web sockets via Windows Phone? I know this isn't directly a Windows 8, but I am using MessageWebSocket for a Win RT app I'm working on right now (I believe is only accessible for Windows store apps?), so hoping I have an option to connect from Windows Phone too.
MonoGame is there to pull people out of the fire without requiring last-minute re-engineering efforts to support extant stuff. It's not something you should be building on.
@GONeale I haven't been through the documentation in a while, but I thought there were some classes in the System.Net.Sockets namespace that were available for the phone.
I see the mix reviews on windows 8. I installed the Developers 90 days free trial version on my desktop and I my self did not like it. What are other people experiencing about windows 8? Will it be a hit or shit?
@Polynomial, @muhammadkashif, @SiPlus: I personally am enjoying it, and actually see myself working more effeciently. The real problem is the learning curve. Way too many things are not intuitive, but once you learn them, you can use the computer faster than in win7. That's my experience at least.
@muhammadkashif I installed win 8 as my primary OS for development. I also tested games and loading pictures on it. Overall, I like most of it. Once I got over the differences in the start menu, I really started to enjoy how easy it is get things going.
@JohnySkovdal I agree 100%. I had to google how to shut down my PC the first time I went to do it. I didn't even know the settings pane exitsted up until that point.
@JohnySkovdal The problem is that I'm a dev, so I usually have 20+ windows open (Visual Studio, Notepad, Calc, Firefox, Delphi IDE, Windows Explorer, OllyDbg, VMware, our product, etc.)
which I find horribly inefficient to deal with on Win8
No. The Start Bar and the "don't say Metro" experience is still there, but when you're in the desktop mode working with desktop apps, it's almost exactly the same
The only difference is when you hit the Win key and search, you get an immersive and faster experience to find the app you want
@Polynomial: Also, if you use the hotkeys, collapsed tasks is even quicker, (winkey + no icon, and extra clicks if you don't want the first task in the group)
It's safe to say that with any complete overhaul it's going to take time to get used to but once you get used to it and take advantage of the features it's amazingly more productive
@JesseJames I don't like its direction to tablet devices. I have a desktop with 24" screen, and I can click 24px buttons well. Also, the UI makes me think I'm using DOS. And, you know what I hate very much about Windows 8? That Microsoft advertises Windows 8 through Cut the Rope, Contre Jour and Fruit Ninja instead of Crysis 2 and Medal of Honor: Warfighter.
I will admit - I don't see myself using "Apps" on my desktop PC. Desktop applications are much more powerful. My home computer currently has all "Marketplace Apps" removed.
@JohnKoerner About shutting down the PC, there's actually quite a few places this can be done. Log off from start menu, Lock screen, Settings charm and ALT + F4 when on the bare desktop.
@JohnKoerner Couldn't agree with you more. Just wanted to point that out, as some see one solution and goes "ahh, so that's the way to do it", thinking it's the ONLY way to do it.
@rudi_visser It feels choppy with multiple monitors. If I am at the top of the screen and closing a window on monitor one, then want to move to monitor two, my mouse gets stuck in the hot corner.
@SiPlus Overheads are tiny compared to the benefits - type safety (no buffer overflows, yay!), expansive yet clean libraries, reflection inbuilt, reduced dev time via LINQ, etc.
@SiPlus not sure what you mean by "shitty casts" - I've never come across awkward casts except when dealing with anonymous types (which you shouldn't cast anyway)
@rudi_visser I am not saying it is a show stopper. It's like a hot girl with different sized earlobes; she is still hot, but the earlobe thing takes something away.
@SiPlus that's called "unclean code." It's fast and effective if you're an embedded programmer (I am!), but on a modern day machine readability is king.
@SiPlus - I think you'll be happy to know that Windows 8 store apps have incredibly strict requirements on performance. All apps must respond to user input within (memory fails me; 40ms?)
@SiPlus - less of a performance impact than you think. There's also a number of factors ensuring high performance of market apps. 1) strict performance requirements which are testing during submission. 2) They run full-screen, so we're not exactly taxing the CPU with a heavy workload
@SiPlus VMs don't expose the hardware for a variety of reasons. You can enable hardware acceleration on most modern VM software, but it's not seamless - they have to emulate some of the DMA / timing stuff.
(for video)
stuff like VT-x helps, but it's still not 100% seamless.
Anyone have any opinions on the state of gaming under Windows 8? I've heard a lot of complaints from Valve/Steam. I'm a big fan of Steam, but I just don't see the problem they're imagining.
I get the impression they just don't like the marketplace competition.
@BTownTKD They spent years making Steam a solid marketplace system, and now MS want to implement their own into the OS... it's pretty easy to see why they're pissed.
Oh yeah total sour grapes from Valve. I don't think the would have minded as much if WinRT was limited to casual gaming like other tablets. But it has full DirectX support and some major players are coming out in support of the platform like Unreal Engine and Unity3D (the biggest engine for Indie developers out there).
Oddly enough, I don't hear the same complaints from Steam about iOS.
WinRT == iOS, last time I checked.
(you know what I mean)
WinRT is to iOS as Windows 8 is to OS X. Steam exists on the desktop systems, but not the tablet/phone systems. To that end, nothing has changed, but Valve has become quite vocal.
So I think Valve's complaint is that the "Modern UI" is very prominent even in the Windows 8 Professional. On MacOS the App Store is there but only if the user wants it.
so the game basically involves recon (nmap, nessus, etc.), then exploitation of a vulnerability, avoidance of IDS/IPS, local privesc once a shell has spawned, dropping a rootkit, etc.
Swordfish was a totally accurate portrayal of hacking. Just last week, I met a guy who told me I had 90 seconds to bypass a triple DES firewall while he held a gun to my head and a hot blonde was "looking for her contacts" under the table.