Battlefield: Modern Combat is using dedicated servers, both for PS2 and Xbox. And they can handle 24+ players. I think that we will see more of this in the future.
I have worked as a software developer professionally for 15 years.
'Crash bugs' am I all to familiar with, and I've heard the concept of 'Class A' bugs.
It would be very nice to have some sort of (unofficial) standard for bug severity.
I also want the criteria for a standard for what alpha and beta versions are.
Don't tell me that Im offtopic here. The issues are related.
Its incredible that it is possible to sue someone for a patented "look and feel"!
I know that someone has patented the XOR algorithm, that is used in every CPU I know of and therefore in most electronic devices. Do you think that that is OK as well?
We must bring an end to this legal mumbo jumbo that makes people laugh at the computer industry.
Battlefield: Modern Combat is using dedicated servers, both for PS2 and Xbox. And they can handle 24+ players. I think that we will see more of this in the future.
Relax man, I was just trolling. ;o)
But I still want a standard for bug severity and priority levels
I have worked as a software developer professionally for 15 years.
'Crash bugs' am I all to familiar with, and I've heard the concept of 'Class A' bugs. It would be very nice to have some sort of (unofficial) standard for bug severity.
I also want the criteria for a standard for what alpha and beta versions are.
Don't tell me that Im offtopic here. The issues are related.
I have never found anything really interesting about the ancient greek woman Messalina. I dare you to prove me wrong! ;o)
Even if that is correct, I still think my point is valid.
BTW: "software patterns" in the title, should read "software patents". What was I thinking? :O)
I know that someone has patented the XOR algorithm, that is used in every CPU I know of and therefore in most electronic devices. Do you think that that is OK as well?
We must bring an end to this legal mumbo jumbo that makes people laugh at the computer industry.