He came to Texas A&M University within the past few years. Someone forgot to tell him that people with his level of prestige and knowlege only teaches graduate level courses. Well, he decided he wanted to teach a freshman introductory course and of course no one is going to tell someone with his level of prestige and knowlege no to anything he wants to do.
Well in my experience they had me learning C on Unix, then Bjarne Stroustrup (along with another professor) taught us C++. I must say that learning a programming language from the creator isn't the best way to do so, as he will begin to go into the extreme detial of how a pointer in C++ works with no regard for the fact that it might be too much information for the first week of class. But it is a great way to scare the ever living piss out of freshmen in college that are considering to become computer engineers.
In the first article the writer beings to complain about accuracy problems with the remote. Stange that there is no mention of hime calibrating the Wii to make it as accurate as possible. Not to mention that the few games he does talk abouit having calibration problems on haven't been played by the public or seen by the press since the New York launch date announcement.
but is it a robot in disguise?
Ever heard of an arcade?
He came to Texas A&M University within the past few years. Someone forgot to tell him that people with his level of prestige and knowlege only teaches graduate level courses. Well, he decided he wanted to teach a freshman introductory course and of course no one is going to tell someone with his level of prestige and knowlege no to anything he wants to do.
Well in my experience they had me learning C on Unix, then Bjarne Stroustrup (along with another professor) taught us C++. I must say that learning a programming language from the creator isn't the best way to do so, as he will begin to go into the extreme detial of how a pointer in C++ works with no regard for the fact that it might be too much information for the first week of class. But it is a great way to scare the ever living piss out of freshmen in college that are considering to become computer engineers.
In the first article the writer beings to complain about accuracy problems with the remote. Stange that there is no mention of hime calibrating the Wii to make it as accurate as possible. Not to mention that the few games he does talk abouit having calibration problems on haven't been played by the public or seen by the press since the New York launch date announcement.
I've got your PS3 vs. Wii right here!
IBM