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00:32
@JohnHaugeland That question was asked a week or so ago and they responded yes you can.
Oh good :)
Thank you for letting me know.
@JohnKoerner Please have a good night :)
@JohnHaugeland No problem. here is the permalink for that: chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/5843834#5843834
oh awesome, even better :D
and abby t. miller is someone who we can trust to be correct? like staff probably, given the way s/he is speaking?
Yes. She works for stackexchange. She gets the official info.
Awesome.
00:55
hello, I'm newbie, we have a mobile app. we have developed the ios version and android version, how can we start to develop a win8 version ?
Depends on what your app does.
To get started you can follow a lot of the links on the apptivate.ms page: apptivate.ms/resources
our app is a client , it connect to our server via TCP protocol
let me check your point
Does it return data via JSON or some protocol?
no, have not yet
only raw bytes
and can I run your development tool on a MACbook?
Visual Studio only runs on Windows.
00:59
thank you, John
You might be able to do something in Mono on the mac, but I don't know what kind of win 8 support they have yet
Are you doing raw TCPIP or is it a web server that is returning raw data?
our server is not a web server
it's a TCPIP server, it create a socket to listen for incoming clients
You can use a StreamSocket to connect to that.
01:02
oh, Can we use the winsock functions on win8?
of course
it's great
It's at a way higher level than winsock
generally speaking you wouldn't, though
because there's system level stuff that's more abstract, and it takes a lot of privilege escalation to get at winsock
It's a wrapper on wrapper of winsock, but in the end you can get mostly the same functionality
01:03
if your actual question is "can we get raw sockets"
then there's like half a dozen ways
and yes, they're all available to you
thank you all
on top of that, if you're in html/hs, you also have websockets, ajax, and so forth
Jim
Jim
What is required to run an XNA game on a Surface RT tablet?
i have a little experience on VC6 , I did some socket program with Winsock
@Jim I have read a few stories that said that XNA does not work with Metro apps
01:06
Hey guys
@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)
Jim
Jim
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.
@JohnKoerner: Yep I've read that too, and no future plans right now I don't think. C++ and DirectX is your only high level option.
Could anybody help me with a quick web sockets question?
C# and directx too
thanks for holding down the fort while i'm not around @JohnKoerner :)
01:07
Ah okay, yes sorry=)
@AbbyT.Miller Wait. I thought he said I could only win one prize. Doubly eligible meaning I could win more than one?
Jim
Jim
@JohnKoerner I'm hoping that is not true. Or there will be games that people can play on a Surface Pro that wont run on a Surface RT
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.
about xna and metro
that is both true and not true. the situation is fine, be happy.
what's going on:
1) XNA is not a real thing anymore. It's gone.
2) They have provided a stub library called MonoGame which can support XNA dependant apps.
So all you really have to do is install a shim and you'll be okay.
However do not make new XNA stuff for the future.
Jim
Jim
01:10
@JohnHaugeland If it is as fine as you say, why would I stop making XNA stuff in the future?
Because shim libraries decay over time. You don't want to start out by saying "let me use this legacy support library."
Same reason you don't use MFC.
@GONeale what version of phone?
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.
@JohnHaugeland doubly eligible meaning your chances of winning increase, but you are still only eligible for one prize
Aha.
Well, that's still just fine. :)
01:14
@JohnKoerner Well, WP7, but even if there is a WP8 solution, that should be fine by the time I'm ready.
@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.
Jim
Jim
@JohnHaugeland MonoGame does not look like it is officially affiliated with Microsoft. Where are you getting your information?
I didn't say they made it, I said they provided it
It comes from the GNU world
it's the implementation of XNA from the Mono .NET stack
 
2 hours later…
03:41
HI, Can I use Win8 as experience on win7? Can I install any application to working here as I did on win7?
 
2 hours later…
05:17
no
user2458346
05:49
how i flag the application for spam
user2458346
for example see the following application link apptivate.ms/apps/151/legend
user2458346
it doesnt contain any relevant information regarding it
user2458346
i wish to bring for moderator attention can anyone here say how to flag the application?
06:01
@vignesh4303 Deleted. Thanks for the heads-up!
user2458346
06:30
@Shog9 mate how can i flag the future apps?
09:54
hello world
10:50
Yesterday I installed Windows 7. I will never install Windows 8 again.
11:15
@SiPlus hmm, can you explain why? I'm planning to install Win 8...
11:55
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?
12:18
I'm going for the latter. Seems to be a "testing the waters" OS like Vista was.
I find the UI completely unproductive.
great for a tablet or touch screen where media interaction is key, but when I actually want to do some work it's insufficient.
Could you recommend published books about W8 Development?
certainly will be shopping for a WinRT tablet though.
12:54
@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
@Polynomial, which is why it's even better, because of the increased dual screen support.
@JohnySkovdal It's only better if I can manage that many windows.
I found myself loading up that task manager thing all the time, and using alt+tab a lot
@Polynomial but what makes it worse on win8?
12:57
rather than a one-click job
@JohnySkovdal one click has become multiple key presses, which is expensive in terms of time and effort.
which oneclick is it that you have lost?
it's the same reason I turned off task collapsing in the taskbar
@JohnySkovdal In Win7 I just click the taskbar icon for the window and I've got my window.
in Win8 it requires a keypress to bring up the window thingy, and then a click (or alt-tabbing) to get to it
even more painful on my laptop, where screen space is hard to come by
@Polynomial: I love the task collapsing feature, but you can disable that as well in win8, so I can't see the difference?
@JohnySkovdal The difference is that Win7 has a taskbar which is available and visible at all times, so it's one click to select a different window.
whereas Win8 requires interaction in order to bring up the list of open windows.
Not sure what your getting at, @Polynomial - the task bar is always visible on the desktop of Windows 8 as well, unless someone explicitly hid it.
13:01
... what? :|
there wasn't a taskbar at all in Win8 when I used it.
@Polynomial What are you talking about? The taskbar is right there just as in Win7 when you're working with such apps (meaning Desktop apps)
@Polynomial: unless you're in "metro" that is.
Shhhhhh! Don't say "metro!"
... so you can turn that metro shit off?
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
13:02
@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)
But whilst working with actual desktop applications there is no difference whatsoever
@BTownTKD: Figured it didn't matter as much, considering that we're in a room with an attached MS contest using the "microsoft-metro" tag. ;)
I do love the term metro - I would've preferred that it stuck.
I'm lost now - when I used Win8 it was a mess of XBLA-style boxes and there didn't seem to be a way to get out of it - everything was fullscreen
Press the start button
that's all
(on the keyboard)
13:04
@Polynomial - what you're describing is the new revamped "Start screen" which replaced the old Start Menu.
or click the desktop icon
@Polynomial the desktop should be the same.
... I'm gonna have to retry this.
still, not happy that the "start screen" is so bloody unintuitive.
That's a fair initial assessment, but I think if you play with it some more, you'll agree that it's an improvement over the old start menu.
2
@BTownTKD ^ This
13:06
@BTownTKD, @Polynomial: Especially if you start using groupings of icons.
I love being able to group my start screen icons into groups. It's my new replacement for using Stardock Fences in Windows 7
I love having all my rarely used programming tools neatly ordered
pow great minds.
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
13:07
That said, I'm not without complaints. I wish the "hot zone" for the charms and start screen icons were larger.
It took me like 2 weeks to work out that I could place a name tag above whole columns of apps :P
especially if you're working inside a windowed VM
@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.
@BTownTKD That's a very good point, WinSrv2012 is very annoying before you get used to the key shortcuts for Charms etc
And, apps are going to have ads, my PC is not an ad space, so I'm not going to switch to Windows 8.
Ads suck.
Tired of them on my Android phone
Linux, Warsow and many other open-source projects are awesome without their devs taking a cent
13:09
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.
And another bad thing about Windows 8:
.NET everywhere
I actually use the News + Music apps on my desktop @ work + laptop
Pin Music off to the side and have News open on left screen when I want a read
I totally dig the task manager!! Sweet. Totallyy.
Then a hot-corner away and I'm back in what I was last in
@SiPlus - you may have to elaborate. I love .NET as a development tool, personally. i don't see the downside to many .NET-based apps.
13:11
@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.
@rudi_visser while I love win 8. I hate teh hot corner
@BTownTKD, .NET takes additional memory and CPU cycles to compile apps and collect garbage
@SiPlus Especially with the option to code in C++
@JohnKoerner Why's that? Like I said up there ^ I only see the real downsides on a server environment
@JohnySkovdal Thanks I eventually figured that out. The problem was it was not intuitive.
13:12
@BTownTKD But aren't .NET assemblies invoked through C++ code written in MSIL and garbage-collected?
@SiPlus I dont have the materials handy, but I believe that's a bit of a false premice
@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.
Type safety is an awful thing
13:13
@JohnKoerner Stuck? I don't have the problem? Are you using the same resolution on all your screens.
No pointers, shitty casts
@JohnySkovdal No.
@SiPlus Ok, now that you're definitely going to have to qualify.
@JohnKoerner I guess. I'm more keyboard oriented so my mouse rarely gets stuck up there if ever really
Garbage collection is only run occasionally, when memory is needed, so the GC process - while "expensive" - is not hogging your CPU.
13:14
@SiPlus Pointers = object references, so yes you can do pointers.
@JohnySkovdal It has a 7px sticky area which your mouse can get "stuck" in
@rudi_visser Ah lol, hadn't noticed.
@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)
@Polynomial, you can't add, subtract and pointer cast references
@JohnySkovdal @JohnKoerner Well tbh I still don't see it being that much of a big deal, a few pixels down and you're out of the zone
13:15
@SiPlus Why would you want to? There are so many ways to deal with lists and such without pointer math.
@SiPlus That becomes even less of a problem when you consider generics, delegates, events, etc. where you can pass type-safe handles to methods.
@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.
@JohnKoerner I see your point :D
and on top of that you can access fields via reflection anyway.
@Polynomial Generics, delegates, events?
@SiPlus more to the point, yes you can: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.intptr.aspx
13:18
Why should I write all this **** when I only need to interpret memory at the same place as a different type?
@SiPlus generics are like MyType<T>, where T is a type you specify, so you can do stuff like List<int>.
@SiPlus Because interpreting unsafe types incorrectly leads to some of the worst security vulnerabilities.
@SiPlus Write all what ****? There's no **** to write, you're not worrying about memory locations in the first place
again, though, what's wrong with var foo = (int)bar; for a cast?
And, I like to iterate on certain array types with ptr = &start; for (somecode) {somecode; ++ptr;}
It's faster than accessing an array index every iteration
@SiPlus in C# that's foreach(var obj in list)
(with an iterator)
13:20
Foreach is much slower than for
sure, but you can do for still
This is even worse than using arrays
or use object references in a linked list
array indexes, I mean
@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.
3
13:20
^
Linked lists? Worse too
@SiPlus And when would performance worry you? We are way out of the 80's, you know? ;)
I get the reason for doing that stuff on embedded systems, where code size and performance is critical, but on a modern system there's no need for it
@JohnySkovdal Performance doesn't worry if slow code is used one-two times
your cost is primarily based in development and maintenance.
13:21
But if you use foreaches and linked lists everywhere, it would be a huge impact on performance
@SiPlus: Actually no, you can't even meassure it.
@SiPlus if you need uber-speed, you can always use an unsafe block.
Developers don't care about performance, but users care
@SiPlus Then optimise
@SiPlus No, users care about negatively impacting performance issues.
13:22
@ridi_visser optimise...
performance in general they couldn't give a toss about.
...by rewritting in C
Not really
@SiPlus We're talking about millions of objects before any user will notice even 10 ms og lag.
@SiPlus ... and introducing a bunch of heap spray bugs.
13:22
*of
Metro doesn't support C programming
@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?)
It does support C++ programming
Yeah, Market apps support C++.
It supports C++.NET, but it's slow
13:23
Native C++ - not even C++CLR
?
It's native..
^^^^^^^^
it supports native C++ too.
WinRT != .NET, we all know this, right?
heh
indeed
raises hand I do.
13:23
sadly yes.
makes portability of frameworks a mess...
but still doable
Yea, thankfully as a C# dev the introduction of Portable Class Libraries should come in very handy
He he, try using it with Silverlight as well... -.-
I find myself struggling with PCL. I hope it matures a bit soon.
While .NET may be not a big speed impact, HTML5 and JavaScript are
@SiPlus Clearly they're not designed for in-depth apps.
people will use HTML5+JS for simple information management apps
maybe a few games (HTML5 canvas is surprisingly fast)
13:25
@JohnySkovdal Not an SL dev but I've certainly read the complaints :(
@Polynomial HTML5 canvas is a lot slower than SDL/SFML
@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 Well, yeah.
@SiPlus So then devs can write code in DirectX/Direct2D with C++..
@SiPlus A banana is also more yellow than sand.
doesn't mean that sand is invalid for all uses.
13:26
@SiPlus But the point is that there are options both for different types of apps, different level developers, and, well, screwit, there are options!
I'm working on HTML5 Quake port, and putimagedata is 10-20 times slower than all other code
Including WebGL code
@rudi_visser .NET dev in general here, so our frameworks have been tried on most .NET related products. Yeah, it's bad alright. ;)
So yesterday I got fingerprints on EVERY windows 8 computer at our local BB
While memcpy to SDL screen buffer takes almost no time
... no touchscreens amongst the bunch; trackpads look to be a pain
13:28
@JohnySkovdal Do the PCLs have Silverlight as one of it's denominators?
@rudi_visser Yeah it does
Is that not a slight help then?
Yes, but you may be disappointed; the more platforms you add to your PCL library, the smaller your available API becomes.
I mean obviously not for everything, but core functionality
@rudi_visser Yeah, if you want your PCL to have almost no functionality. ;)
13:29
@BTownTKD Indeed but that's the point ^_^
Fair enough
Like I say, I've only used so far for WP/Win8 apps at the moment and it doesn't perform so much restriction
@SiPlus So you're abusing technology to do something outside its design parameters, then complaining that it's not well-suited?
@rudi_visser We ended up removing Silverlight from the equation again, because too many things became impossible to do.
@Polynomial Why outside?
Canvas has strong orientation to games
@SiPlus WebGL is designed to bring graphics to the web, but not full immersive 3D first-person shooter gaming.
@SiPlus Yes, web games, not full on huge 3D games
13:30
If uploading a framebuffer slows down the game to 5-10 FPS, there's something wrong with the technology itself
@Polynomial WebGL speed is fine
The speed of canvas putImageData is awful
Should I be able to implement a Crysis clone in VB6 with DirectX 7?
no, because it's just not designed for that.
@Polynomial Not designed for frame buffers? Really?
@SiPlus I didn't say that. I said it's not designed to run full-3D FPS games.
13:33
@Polynomial 3D runs relatively fast
HTML5 support is also in its infancy
Should I be able to implement a real-time networking stack on an Atmega 2560?
we may have better performance as driver support grows
In theory I can, but it's way outside the design parameters, and it's gonna run like shit.
Should I be able to play Doom 3 in a VMware box?
I think I will replace the GUI rendering with WebGL later
13:34
In theory I can, but it's outside the design parameters for VMware.
@Polynomial you should be able to, Doom 3 is 8 years old
@SiPlus It's less about performance, more about the fact that it's not exposing a real hardware graphics card.
o_O
what about VirtualBox/Virtual PC?
.. getting back to Win8 based on the VMware side discussion - has anyone used Client Hyper-V?
13:36
.. and using client Hyper-V played any games? Because even though your root OS is semi-virtualised it still meant to expose real hardware
@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.
I think I'm enjoying this conversation more than actual Windows 8 Dev questions.
shame
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.
I have loaded up guildwars 2 with no problems.
@BTownTKD I agree about the competition
13:43
I'm pretty sure it is just that, even with Client Hyper-V enabled (see above) it still performs brilliantly
Yeah - it seems like another of those instances where people fail to keep the desktop and marketplace/Metro ecosystems separate.
@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.
I remember back in the day when Steam was only cool cos of CSS.
and by "cool" I mean "used"
@rudi_visser ... but by that point they had HL2.
ah.
"in October 2012, Valve expanded the service to include non-gaming software"
Well that's weird isn't it..
13:46
heh
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).
@MikeBrown Been meaning to check Unity out... any experience of it yourself?
And of course on Windows RT, the Windows Store is the only game in town.
@po
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.
@Polynomial I've been trying to find the time to develop a game since I was in College...a friend of mine is a Unity developer he loves it.
13:50
But Steam don't provide to Apple devices
Ah right yes nothing has changed, lol
They do.
Steam offers Mac games and products
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.
@MikeBrown I've been working on two game project - one webforms based, one based on an interactive desktop written in XNA/C#
@BTownTKD It was a very limited representation of their main store from what I've seen though
the latter is proving to be difficult in XNA, since it's kinda awkward to do 2D stuff in it cleanly.
13:52
@Polynomial interactive desktop...I'm intrigued.
@MikeBrown you ever play Uplink?
I LOVE UPLINK
(Sorry)
it's a similar concept to that.
@rudi_visser I was a dev on the Onlink project :P
That's so cool, I only discovered Uplink thanks to a Mandrake distribution back in the day
13:53
but essentially imagine a hacking sim game that isn't quite so hollywood.
@Polynomial I LOVE IT. There was a game in the 80s called Hacker. Uplink was the first game that recreated that experience for me.
based more on the idea of playing a fake version of BackTrack
@Polynomial wait, you mean hollywood doesnt have an accurate portrayal of hacking?
I love how this room is still tagged 'microsoft-metro' even though Microsoft insists you shouldn't call it that for legal reasons.
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.
@Pieter - That and half the apps in the marketplace are MetroXXXXX
eventually aim to have some in-game exploit dev stuff that mirrors real native exploit writing, including ASLR/DEP bypassing
with a rudimentary x86-style instruction set
This will be cool
indeed
13:56
^
mainly working on the UI stuff right now - it's where the bulk of the work is
it's relatively horrible to have to write your own components (text box, checkbox, etc.) for a virtual desktop space
I've got all of the window management stuff working though. just gotta build some kinda task manager / window manager into it to polish it off.
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.
What scares me about writing my own components completely is selectable text
@MikeBrown I cannot describe how much I wish the infosec career path was like that ;)
I think WinRT supports XAML widgets on a DX surface.
13:58
@rudi_visser Yeah, that's one of the hard points. Hardest bit of it so far was getting text to scroll correctly when it's too big for the box
what scares me about writing my own components completely is writing my own components completely
windows 8 doesn't come with form tools? :(
I tried XAML once, didn't like it, moved back to bog-standard winforms.
@DavidIsNotHere <table><tr><td><form> would work I'm sure
13:59
I don't like mixing XML with anything else.
@Polynomial I had the same experience until I used it much much more
I had the horrible experience of having to lean XSQL (yes, that's a real thing)

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