LightSpeed Studios, owned by Tencent, has joined up with the Open 3D Foundation who oversee the Open 3D Engine (O3DE). They've joined as a Premier Member joining the likes of Adobe, Epic Games, Microsoft, Intel and others. This means they will be giving resources to the Open 3D Foundation to further development of the Open 3D Engine.
On top of that though and I'm sure this will raise some eyebrows, Tencent Senior Project Manager, Lanye Wang, will join the Open 3D Foundation's Governing Board.
From the press release:
“We are very excited to join the Open 3D Foundation, especially for the opportunity to leverage the connection with all of the other members to dive deep into the graphic technologies and build a top-level open source 3D engine community,” said Lanye Wang, representing LightSpeed Studios. “We look forward to working with you.”
“It has been amazing to see the rapid growth of the O3D ecosystem, and we’re elated to welcome LightSpeed Studios to our community,” said Royal O’Brien, Executive Director of Open 3D Foundation and General Manager of Games and Digital Media at the Linux Foundation. “LightSpeed Studios has achieved a strong reputation as a leading global game developer, offering high-quality gaming experiences to hundreds of millions of users worldwide, and we are excited to collaborate with them as we enhance O3DE’s capabilities for global 3D developers.”
Quoting: MayeulCDebian uses the names of different Toy Story characters for the releases.Quoting: MiZoGCouldn't stand any Toy Story film it didn't prevent me from installing Debian.
I don't see the connection, did I miss something?
It started back in 1996 when Bruce Perens was the project leader and worked for Pixar.
Quoting: GeamanduraThe name is just so idiotic. Imagine if Blender was called Open 3D Editor. Or Audacity was called Open Audio Player. No imagination, no energy to live, ...
More like the very _in_ thing to name your file explorer Files, so you can eclipse the sun of possibilities...
Note this is a stab at the way Google and Apple do things, GNOME seems more to have hopped on that train as it was going (which create it's own issues, with documentation mentioning Nautilus, etc ... Most obvious being Evince, because there is basically at least 2 "GNOME Document Viewer", one being a rotten thing, and Evince.)
Quoting: MayeulCQuoting: MiZoGCouldn't stand any Toy Story film it didn't prevent me from installing Debian.
I don't see the connection, did I miss something?
Because all Debian releases are named after Toy Story characters.
It's good to see another open source game engine, but the fact it took a while to get it on Linux may hint at something. Let's keep a positive mindset and hope for the best, but as it is, I think I'll keep on holding on Godot.
Quoting: hell0Quoting: GeamanduraThe name is just so idiotic. Imagine if Blender was called Open 3D Editor. Or Audacity was called Open Audio Player. No imagination, no energy to live, this comes straight from the desk of Toby from The Office. [...]
Counterpoint: I use openstack, every component has its own cool name unrelated to whatever it does: neutron, nova, cinder, glance, octavia, heat, magnum, designate, gnocchi, horizon and so on. Heck, even versions have names instead of numbers. Know what? It's effing annoying and serves no purpose whatsoever aside from confusing newcomers and making my life miserable.
Absolutely on the same page of being overwhelmed by versions having non-number designations. In today's expansive landscape of software components, it takes some oversized ego and self importance to ask of your ecosystem to put the effort to memorize codenames that are then officially used as part of repo paths etc. -- looking at Ubuntu and their code names for example. Leave the animals and adjectives for your megafans who feel entertained by that, not by regular folk who have to open Wikipedia to consult the correspondence between codenames and numerical versioning every single irritating god dang time they have to interact with your software.
See more from me