Hiding a Clingerman to Talk Natively
In Benchmarking C#/.Net Direct3D 11 APIs vs native C++ (a post from March 14, I wonder why I did not share this already…) Alexandre Mutel explores the cost of calling native APIs from managed code (AKA interop) via micro benchmarking various managed Direct3D 11 APIs. He does this because:
Hopefully, in SharpDX unlike any other DirectX .NET APIs, this code has been written to be consistent over the whole generated code, and was carefully designed to be quite efficient… but still, It has obviously a cost, and we need to know it!
Spoiler: The offerings Microsoft has in store are, by far, slower than SlimDX/SharpDX.
In other news: There is a thread over in the AppBuhAppHub forums praising the XNA MVPs. We here in the barracks fully support that effort – mostly due to the fact that Captain ZSquare has access to various arms here and we lost the keys to lock up the arsenal… – so you might head over to add to the +1 (none of the Google +1 stuff) choir.
Recommendations on Resuming
Coming hot from the freshly-awarded MVP Michael B. McLaughlin, a set of no less than eight (8= 2*4 = 3+5 = 10-2) tips to improve the experience of users when they need to close and resume your XNA game on Windows Phone 7. The article is a must read for everyone who doesn't want to annoy their customers.
Go ahead and read it now.
Posing a Clingerman to Welcome Our New Overlords
That’s right: George W. Clingerman finally stopped pretending being a developer/programmer/someone who knows code to pursue a career as DJ now, going by the nick DJ Cling-Star. Meanwhile, there are three new additions to the happy bunch that is known as the Direct/XNA MVPs:
The third one is MIA currently… [Update: OK, our intelligentintelligence services managed to get ahold of his name now, Dr. Minh-Triet TRAN, but not many more details…]
Lets hope thisthese guys can fulfill the demands of the community…
[Update: Moo]