I thought of that a hour ago and now I'm here to post about it...
At work we sometimes get quick formations using the WebEx conference tool. We watch our screen and listen to conference and we can ask question and they show us, you know what I mean, that's not new.
To expand the list of shaderhackers here, maybe a few of us would be skilled enough and interested to receive a free lesson from one of our [i]fixers[/i] on how to fix games. Tools like Windows Remote Desktop, TeamViewer or AnyDesk could be used to share the screen of the [i]fixer[/i] with someone who could easily sees and learn how he usually works on a fix with different tools used.
Sure there is tutorials like [url=http://wiki.bo3b.net]Bo3b's School for Shaderhackers[/url] but going by ourself reading docs and try/error is not always a motivation. On the other hand, when someone with lot of knowledge take time to show us how to, it's suddenly more interesting a quick to learn.
I guess some requirements would be needed to apply, to not waste one man time and effort. Minimal knowledge in this and that, you tell us.
All of you game fixers, thoughts? Sometimes, only 30 minutes could kickstart someone...
I thought of that a hour ago and now I'm here to post about it...
At work we sometimes get quick formations using the WebEx conference tool. We watch our screen and listen to conference and we can ask question and they show us, you know what I mean, that's not new.
To expand the list of shaderhackers here, maybe a few of us would be skilled enough and interested to receive a free lesson from one of our fixers on how to fix games. Tools like Windows Remote Desktop, TeamViewer or AnyDesk could be used to share the screen of the fixer with someone who could easily sees and learn how he usually works on a fix with different tools used.
Sure there is tutorials like Bo3b's School for Shaderhackers but going by ourself reading docs and try/error is not always a motivation. On the other hand, when someone with lot of knowledge take time to show us how to, it's suddenly more interesting a quick to learn.
I guess some requirements would be needed to apply, to not waste one man time and effort. Minimal knowledge in this and that, you tell us.
All of you game fixers, thoughts? Sometimes, only 30 minutes could kickstart someone...
That becomes quite tricky to do with timezones. As a thought, building a fixing wiki might be useful - covering all the common patterns, things to look for, features of 3dmigoto, etc. It would be a significant amount of documentation to write and I don't know how many people would use it, but it has the potential to act as a useful reference guide and make it much easier for anyone getting started.
That becomes quite tricky to do with timezones. As a thought, building a fixing wiki might be useful - covering all the common patterns, things to look for, features of 3dmigoto, etc. It would be a significant amount of documentation to write and I don't know how many people would use it, but it has the potential to act as a useful reference guide and make it much easier for anyone getting started.
At work we sometimes get quick formations using the WebEx conference tool. We watch our screen and listen to conference and we can ask question and they show us, you know what I mean, that's not new.
To expand the list of shaderhackers here, maybe a few of us would be skilled enough and interested to receive a free lesson from one of our fixers on how to fix games. Tools like Windows Remote Desktop, TeamViewer or AnyDesk could be used to share the screen of the fixer with someone who could easily sees and learn how he usually works on a fix with different tools used.
Sure there is tutorials like Bo3b's School for Shaderhackers but going by ourself reading docs and try/error is not always a motivation. On the other hand, when someone with lot of knowledge take time to show us how to, it's suddenly more interesting a quick to learn.
I guess some requirements would be needed to apply, to not waste one man time and effort. Minimal knowledge in this and that, you tell us.
All of you game fixers, thoughts? Sometimes, only 30 minutes could kickstart someone...
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