Visual Studio .NET - Visual Studio .NET Visual Studio .NET (also known as Studio .NET and VC7) is an IDE developed (2002) by Microsoft. It is for the Microsoft Windows operating system and is aimed primarily but not exclusively at development for Win32 platforms. The latest version in their line of powerful IDEs, Studio .NET supports the new .NET languages C#, Visual Basic .NET and Managed C++ in addition to C++. The look and feel of Studio .NET is nearly identical to previous versions of the IDE. Some notable exceptions include the cleaner interface and greater cohesiveness. It is also more customizable with status windows that automatically hide when not in use. The most notable feature of the IDE is its support of the new .NET languages. Programs developed in.
Visual Basic .NET - Visual Basic .NET from Microsoft's Visual Basic (VB), Visual Basic .NET (VB.NET) is an improvement from classic VB. The enhancements of the computer language are targeted to use the Microsoft's .NET framework and to bridge the gap towards the C#. Visual Basic .NET is, in general, syntactically similar to Visual Basic, but includes object-oriented features and an object hierarchy based on the .NET framework that makes it a more complex system as compared to other variants of BASIC. A migration wizard is available in Visual Studio .NET, although many features must be recoded by hand due to the extensive changes in the object library. Like C#, VB.NET compiles to MSIL which needs to be JITtedted as it is executed. The MSIL produced by VB.NET is identical.
Microsoft Visual Studio - Microsoft Visual Studio Microsoft Visual Studio is a series of suites of software design, compilation and IDEs programs by Microsoft. Visual Studio includes Visual Basic Visual C++ Visual C# Interdev (web page development) In the past, the following products were included. Visual J++ Java clone FoxPro Major Visual Studio versions include: Visual Studio 5.0 Visual Studio 6.0 Visual Studio .NET.
Visual C Plus Plus - Visual C Plus Plus Visual C++ is an Integrated Development Environment product for the C++ programming language engineered by Microsoft. It has powerful tools for developing and debugging C++ code, especially that written for the Microsoft Windows API and the DirectX API. For example, it allows for remote debugging using a separate computer and allows debugging by stepping through code a line at a time. The latest version of this IDE is version 6.0. It has been superseded by Visual Studio .NET..
Integrated development environment - example, Delphi programming language). Although some multiple-language IDEs are in use, typically an IDE is devoted to a specific programming language, as in the Visual BASIC IDE. Sometimes a version control system and various tools to simplify the construction of a GUI are integrated as well. Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 History 2 Popular IDEs 3 Tile-based direct manipulation systems History IDEs are only necessary when development is done while sitting at some form of computer console. Therefore most early languages did not have one, since they were prepared using flowcharts, coding forms and keypunches before being submitted to the compiler. The first language to be created with an IDE was Dartmouth BASIC in 1964, coincidentally the first language to be designed for use while sitting at a computer terminal. Its.
Delphi programming language - Language (the Pascal with object-oriented extensions) originally targeted only Microsoft Windows, but now builds native applications for Linux and the Microsoft .NET Framework as well (see below). Its most popular use is the development of desktop and enterprise database applications, but as a general purpose development tool it is capable of and used for most types of development projects. It was one of the first of what came to be known as RAD tools, for Rapid Application Development, when released in 1995. Delphi 2, released a year later, supported 32-bit Windows environments, and a C++ version, C++Builder, followed a few years after. In 2001 a Linux version known as Kylix (a classical Greek urn) became available. With one new major release every year, in 2002, the product became known as Delphi.
Timeline of video games - Smilebit Yeti Interactive Events: Reuters reports that the Sony Playstation 2 console will export controls by Trade Ministry of Japan since the PS2 is sophisticated enough for military application NPD Group, Inc. reports that Electronic Arts ranks 1st in third-party video game publishing in the USA, ahead of Infogrames Entertainment SA AIAS (Academy of Interactive Arts & Sciences) · hosts the 3rd Annual Interactive Achievement Awards for video games · inducts Hironobu Sakaguchi of Square Enix to the AIAS Hall Of Fame BAFTA (British Academy of Film and Television Arts) · hosts the 4th annual BAFTA Interactive Awards for multimedia technologies · 7 of 20 awards go to video games · awards David Bowie in part for his contributions to the video game Omikron: The Nomad Soul (for PC) E3 2000.
Internet censorship in China - comments with white space which allows the reader to know that comments were taken down and to often guess what they were. One controversial issue is whether Western companies should supply equipment to the Chinese government which aids in the blocking of sites. Some argue that it is wrong for companies to profit from censorship, while others argue that equipment being supplied is standard Internet infrastructure equipment and that providing this sort of equipment actually aids the flow of information. Without the equipment, the Chinese government would not develop the Internet at all. A similar dilemma faces Western content providers such as Yahoo and AOL who must abide by Chinese government wishes, including having internal content monitors, to operate within China. Sites that host software that can be used to circumvent.
Fox Networks - They include the Fox Network, Fox News Channel and Fox Sports Net. The name derives from the Twentieth Century Fox film studio, which Murdoch had previously acquired and which is lumped with the television operations under Fox Inc within News Corporation..
Warriors of the Net - Warriors of the Net Rockman EXE: Warriors of the Net is a sprite comic based on the Rockman, known in the United States as Megaman, video game sub-series Rockman EXE. It is also known as Megaman Battle Network. Unlike most sprite comics, it has little, if any, humor, but makes up for it with plot and visual effects. It is created by an invididual who chooses to use his screen name of White Dragon Nall. External Link http://wotn.2ya.com: The comic's website.
Studio art - Studio art Studio art, when considered as an academic discipline, is the making of visual art (such as painting, drawing or sculpture), contrasted to the study of art history, for instance. The term can be used more generally just to refer to visual art that is made, or in some cases is similar to that made, in a studio..
Hergé - Brussels, Belgium. His four years of primary schooling coincided with World War I (1914 - 1918), during which Brussels was occupied by Germany. Georges, who displayed an early affinity for drawing, filled the margins of his earliest schoolbooks with doodles of the German invaders. Except for a few drawing lessons which he would later take at Ecole Saint-Luc, he never had any formal training in the visual arts. Like many other Catholic boys, Georges joined the Boy Scouts, which brought him to many countries in Europe for summer camps. His subsequent comics work would be heavily influenced by the ethics of the scouting movement, as well as these early travel experiences. On finishing school in 1925, Georges worked at the Catholic newspaper Le XXe Siècle. The following year, he published his.
Hollywood Animation: The TV Era - the 1950s, though this decline was gradual. Both the Warner Bros and MGM cartoon studios were at the peak of their creativity at the beginning of the decade. The Hollywood cartoon studios gradually moved away from the lush, realistic detail of the 1940s to a more simplistic, less realistic style of animation. The influence of UPA had caused a number of studio heads to literally order their cartoon studios to "make cartoons like UPA!," and the effect was seen on the screens. In particular, the cartoons of Chuck Jones at Warner Bros. reached a peak that has rarely been equalled in the entire history of animation. While Jones did produce a number of mediocre-quality cartoons (that were occasionally cruel and violent), much of his output of the 1950s consisted of one.
Grammy Awards of 2000 - Op. 30; "Spring" Sonata) Best Classical Contemporary Composition Pierre Boulez (composer) & the Ensemble Inter-Contemporain for Boulez: Répons Best Classical Album Andreas Neubronner (producer), Michael Tilson Thomas (conductor), the Peninsula Boys Choir, the San Francisco Girls Choir & the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra & Chorus for Stravinsky: Firebird; The Rite of Spring; Perséphone Best Classical Crossover Album The Chestnut Brass Company & Peter Schickele for Schickele: Hornsmoke (Piano Concerto No. 2 in F Major "Ole"; Brass Calendar; Hornsmoke - A Horse Opera Composing and arranging Best Instrumental Composition Don Sebesky (composer) for "Joyful Noise Suite" Best Song Written for a Motion Picture, Television or Other Visual Media Madonna & William Orbit (songwriters) for "Beautiful Stranger" performed by Madonna Best Instrumental Composition Written for a Motion Picture, Television or Other Visual Media.
Edward R. Murrow - foreign news story via radio. Murrow and Shirer went on to organize the CBS World News Roundup, which brought together correspondents from various European cities together for a single broadcast. This was considered revolutionary at the time. Murrow was sent to London before the outbreak of World War II, while Shirer stayed on the European continent, stationed in Berlin. When war broke out Murrow provided live radio broadcasts from the height of the London Blitz. His signature open "This -- is London" electrified radio audiences as news programming never had before. Previously, war coverage had been mostly provided by newspaper reports, and earlier radio news programs had usually been an announcer reading wireservice reports in a studio. Shirer's coverage from Berlin also brought him national acclaim, and a commentator's position with.
Émile Cohl - in the Cherbourg regiment, and drew some more. Elie placed him with a maritime insurance broker. Émile left the broker, got a much poorer-paying job with a philatelist and declared his preference for drawing, the Bohemian lifestyle, and if necessary, going hungry. In 1878, Émile obtained a letter of recommendation from Etienne Carjat to approach André Gill, the best-known caricaturist of the day, for a job. Gill had made his fame a decade earlier by publishing La Lune, a periodical critical of Napoleon III. His presses were smashed and he was incarcerated. He started La Lune Rousse in 1876 to continue his work. By this time, he had moved beyond attacking individuals to making observations on the ludicrousness of conformist bourgeois values in general. However, the government was becoming increasingly liberal,.
Dziga Vertov - in the nascent Marxist state. Propagandistic tendencies are also present, but with more subtlety, in the episode featuring the construction of an airport: one shot shows the former Tsar's tanks helping prepare a foundation, with an intertitle reading "Tanks on the labor front." Vertov clearly intended an active relationship with his audience in the series--in the final segment he includes contact information--but by the 14th episode the series had become so experimental that some critics dismissed Vertov's efforts as "insane." Vertov responds to their criticisms with the assertion that the critics were hacks nipping "revolutionary effort" in the bud, and concludes the essay with his promise to "explode art's tower of Babel." In Vertov's view, "art's tower of Babel" was the subservience of cinematic technique to narrative, commonly known as the.
Duran Duran - MTV was launched in the United States, before anyone knew what an impact the music channel would have on the industry. The band expected the "Girls On Film" video to be played only in the newer nightclubs that had video screens, or on pay-TV channels like the Playboy Channel. Needless to say, the raunchy video (featuring topless women mud wrestling and other not-very-stylised depictions of sexual fetishes) created an uproar, and was consequently banned by the BBC (an edited version was aired on MTV); and needless to say, the band enjoyed and capitalized on that uproar. Later in 1981, the band went on their first United States tour, where they performed in venues such as The Roxy nightclub in Los Angeles and The Peppermint Lounge in New York, followed by more.
Dutch Golden Age - masked the taste of not so fresh food). In 1609 the Amsterdam exchange bank was founded, a century before its English counterpart. The Dutch also dominated trade between European countries. The Low Countries were favorably positioned on a crossing of east-west and north-south trade routes and connected to a large German hinterland through a major river, the Rhine. Dutch traders shipped wine from France and Portugal to the Baltic lands and returned with grain destined for countries round the Mediterranean Sea. National industries expanded as well. Ship yards and sugar refineries are prime examples. As more and more land was made productive, partially through transforming lakes into polders, local grain production and dairy farming soared. The flourishing Dutch trade produced a large very wealthy merchant class. The new prosperity brought more.
DirectX - including OpenGL on their Windows NT platform. At the time, OpenGL required "high end" hardware and was limited to engineering and CAD uses. Direct3D was intended to be a lightweight partner to OpenGL for game use. As the power of the graphics cards and the computers running them grew, OpenGL became a mainstream product. At that point a "battle" opened between supporters of the cross-platform OpenGL, and the Windows-only D3D, which many argued was another example of Microsoft's embrace, extend and extinguish business tactic. Nevertheless, the other API's of DirectX are often combined with OpenGL in many computer games because OpenGL does not in itself include all of DX's functionality. Several attempts to address this have generally failed. External Links Microsoft's DirectX site: http://www.microsoft.com/directx Tutorial Sites To keep these relevant to.