KDE Games/Sprint 2011: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:Logo Games Sprint 2011.png|560px]]
[[Image:Logo Games Sprint 2011.png|560px]]
[[Image:Icon Games Sprint 2011.png|right|150px|Small icon]]


== Goals ==
== Goals ==


* recoat [[KDE Games/Tagaro|rusty parts of libkdegames]]
* Recoat [[KDE Games/Tagaro|rusty parts of libkdegames]].
* [[KDE Games/Tagaro/Data ontology|bridge the gaps]] between kdegames, Gluon and non-KDE games
* Bridge the gaps between kdegames, Gluon and non-KDE games.
* ''Add more bridge puns here.''
* According to the TUD's (venue) motto, [http://tu-dresden.de/die_tu_dresden/portrait/motto Wissen schafft Brücken] - knowledge creates bridges. We will look into current scientific work to see how the desktop of the future might be affected.


== Date and venue ==
== Participants ==


* Location: Technical University Dresden, Faculty of Computer Science
* Julian Helfferich
* possible dates: 21 - 25 March, 29 March - 1 April; weekends following these weeks are probably available, too. Please register which dates work best for you for this by filling in http://doodle.com/43bw977x929sd3ha
* Arjen Hiemstra
* Dan Leinir Turthra Jensen
* Jeffrey Kelling
* Friedrich Kossebau
* Felix Lemke
* Stefan Majewsky
* Laszlo Papp
* Josef Spillner
* Shantanu Tushar


== Possible participants ==
== Blogs & Reports ==


We will probably have capacity for up to 8 people. We might be able to get a bigger room if we know early enough.
Live coverage from the sprint.


Please copy a row from the end of the table and fill it in if you plan to come. If you're unsure about how to fill out the fields, look at similar tables at older sprints, e.g. [[KDE_Mobile/Sprints/November2010-Planning|here]]. Please enter in the "Date preference" field when you can come.
* Josef 26.03.: [http://www.kuarepoti-dju.net/blog/2011-03-26-bluewonder-ocs/]
* Stefan 26.03.: [http://majewsky.wordpress.com/2011/03/26/kde-games-sprint-day-12/] -- Photo repository online at [http://quickgit.kde.org/?p=scratch%2Fmajewsky%2Fblue-wonder-meeting.git&a=tree]
* Josef 25.03.: [http://www.kuarepoti-dju.net//blog/2011-03-25-bluewonder-kdegames/]
* Stefan 24.03.: [http://majewsky.wordpress.com/2011/03/24/kde-games-sprint-day-0/]
* Leinir 24.03.: [http://amarok.kde.org/blog/archives/1209-I-was-interviewed!.html]


{| class="wikitable" border="1"
Post-event blog.
!Name
!Email
!Arrival
!Depart
!Cost
!Sponsor?
!Hotel?
!Food
!Work
!Airport
!Flights
!Remarks/Date preference
|-
| Stefan Majewsky
| majewsky@gmx.net
| N/A
| N/A
| N/A
| N/A
| N/A
|
| [[KDE Games/Tagaro|Tagaro]]
| DRS
| N/A
| local organizer
|-
| Josef Spillner
| N/A
| N/A
| N/A
| N/A
| N/A
|
| [http://techbase.kde.org/Development/Architecture/KDE4/KGGZ GGZ in KDE]
| DRS
| N/A
| local organiser
|-
| Laszlo Papp
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Gluon
|
|
|
|-
| Arjen Hiemstra
|
|
|
|
|
| Vegetarian
| Gluon
|
|
|
|-
| Shantanu Tushar
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Gluon
|
|
|
|-
| Dan Leinir Turthra Jensen
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Gluon
|
|
|
|-
| Johannes Bergmeier
|
|
|
|
|
|
| KSudoku + others
|
|
|
|}


Field description:
* Friedrich 28.03.: [http://frinring.wordpress.com/2011/03/28/introducing-kde-games-to-fullscreen-and-touch-interfaces-blue-wonder-2011/]
* Arrival: When will you arrive? (N/A if you live in Dresden)
 
* Depart: When will you depart? (N/A if you live in Dresden)
== Program ==
* Cost/Sponsor: Do you have any costs for accommodation and travel? Who can reimburse them?
 
* Hotel: Where do you stay?
* Thursday: arrival
:: The two above items are generally taken care of by those organising the sprint, at least for the sprints i have taken part in to date... Generally this happens in cooperation with the e.V., who is happy to do the hotel booking for you. --[[User:Leinir|Leinir]] 15:15, 19 January 2011 (UTC)
* Friday: opening, lightning talk session, lunch, discussion/hacking
* Food: Any restrictions (e.g. vegetarians, vegans, allergies)
* Saturday: discussion/hacking (lunch inbetween)
* Work: On what topics, projects will you be working at the sprint?
* Sunday: discussion/hacking (lunch inbetween), departure
* Airport: If you're flying, from where do you come? (reminder for booking: Dresden is DRS)
 
* Flights: If you're flying, you might want to enter the flight numbers for reference (or for picking you up.)
=== Lightning talk session ===
* Remarks/Date preference: Got anything more to say, esp. about the times when you're available?
 
* Josef Spillner: Welcome - KDE at the Faculty of Computer Science at TUD
* Stefan Majewsky: The state of Project Tagaro
* Josef Spillner: Online gaming infrastructure alias KGGZ
* Dan Leinir Turthra Jensen: The Gluon Vision, and State of the Project
 
== Results ==
 
* Josef: OCS export for GGZ
* Stefan: plugin infrastructure and shell for [http://quickgit.kde.org/?p=libtagaro.git&a=summary Tagaro] games, a [http://quickgit.kde.org/?p=scratch/majewsky/planarity.git&a=summary first plugin], first application (Tagaro Shell) outside Gluon to use Gluon libraries
* Arjen, Dan, Laszlo, Shantanu: getting the next [http://quickgit.kde.org/?p=gluon.git&a=summary Gluon] release ready, export headers for Tagaro Shell
* all of the above: brainstorming about future of OCS protocol and GGZ
* Friedrich: make KDE games friendly towards small and touch-enabled screens (e.g. "Full screen" actions)
* Julian: work towards a level editor for KBreakOut
* Felix: continue work on a new [http://quickgit.kde.org/?p=scratch/lemke/koushin.git&a=summary a new game idea]
* Jeffrey: adding AI to [http://quickgit.kde.org/?p=scratch/jkelling/magnetikplanet.git&a=summary his game]
 
== Text for quartlerly report (draft) ==
 
Title: Blue Wonder Meeting (24-27 March 2011, Dresden, Germany)
 
Just before the end of the first quarter of 2011, ten developers gathered in Dresden to discuss and implement the future of KDE Games. The local KDE community was represented very well by four developers, plus two from the nearby German capital Berlin.
 
While the local students Felix Lemke and Jeffrey Kelling used the opportunity to continue work on their own game ideas and present them to the fellow audience, newcomer Julian Helfferich committed the first bits of his work towards a level editor for KBreakOut. Friedrich Kossebau, motivated by his packaging work in the MeeGo community, assessed the playability of KDE Games on devices with small screens and touch-input and started on a patch to add fullscreen capability to all games.
 
Apart from these individual projects, the hottest topic (and initial incentive for the sprint) was to strengthen the bonds and to define the relationship between the different subprojects in the KDE Games community.
 
Dresden-based developer Stefan Majewsky spoke about his work in Project Tagaro which strives to create a libkdegames "2.0" that makes the existing codebase competitive and easier to maintain for the next few years. The other host, Josef Spillner, presented his work on the GGZ project which enables gaming over the network and creates client and server tools for managing social networks of gamers. GGZ technology is already available in a handful of KDE Games, but the existing KGGZ libraries need an update, which will hopefully be delivered by Tagaro in the near future.
 
Gluon, the other ongoing library effort in the KDE Games community, was represented by four developers from all over the world. Gluon delivers a comprehensive set of libraries for game development and an IDE that allows to create games with as less code as possible. The associated GamingFreedom.org website will allow game creators to share their products and gamers to interact with the creators.
 
Gluon uses the Open Collaboration Services protocol (OCS) for its social networking features, while GGZ implements similar features since years with a custom protocol. However, Josef Spillner committed initial support for an OCS export in GGZ to allow for integration with OCS-enabled applications like those from the Gluon project. It was agreed to collaborate on interoperable protocols also in those areas where OCS cannot be used.

Latest revision as of 03:58, 27 March 2012

Small icon
Small icon

Goals

  • Recoat rusty parts of libkdegames.
  • Bridge the gaps between kdegames, Gluon and non-KDE games.
  • According to the TUD's (venue) motto, Wissen schafft Brücken - knowledge creates bridges. We will look into current scientific work to see how the desktop of the future might be affected.

Participants

  • Julian Helfferich
  • Arjen Hiemstra
  • Dan Leinir Turthra Jensen
  • Jeffrey Kelling
  • Friedrich Kossebau
  • Felix Lemke
  • Stefan Majewsky
  • Laszlo Papp
  • Josef Spillner
  • Shantanu Tushar

Blogs & Reports

Live coverage from the sprint.

  • Josef 26.03.: [1]
  • Stefan 26.03.: [2] -- Photo repository online at [3]
  • Josef 25.03.: [4]
  • Stefan 24.03.: [5]
  • Leinir 24.03.: [6]

Post-event blog.

  • Friedrich 28.03.: [7]

Program

  • Thursday: arrival
  • Friday: opening, lightning talk session, lunch, discussion/hacking
  • Saturday: discussion/hacking (lunch inbetween)
  • Sunday: discussion/hacking (lunch inbetween), departure

Lightning talk session

  • Josef Spillner: Welcome - KDE at the Faculty of Computer Science at TUD
  • Stefan Majewsky: The state of Project Tagaro
  • Josef Spillner: Online gaming infrastructure alias KGGZ
  • Dan Leinir Turthra Jensen: The Gluon Vision, and State of the Project

Results

  • Josef: OCS export for GGZ
  • Stefan: plugin infrastructure and shell for Tagaro games, a first plugin, first application (Tagaro Shell) outside Gluon to use Gluon libraries
  • Arjen, Dan, Laszlo, Shantanu: getting the next Gluon release ready, export headers for Tagaro Shell
  • all of the above: brainstorming about future of OCS protocol and GGZ
  • Friedrich: make KDE games friendly towards small and touch-enabled screens (e.g. "Full screen" actions)
  • Julian: work towards a level editor for KBreakOut
  • Felix: continue work on a new a new game idea
  • Jeffrey: adding AI to his game

Text for quartlerly report (draft)

Title: Blue Wonder Meeting (24-27 March 2011, Dresden, Germany)

Just before the end of the first quarter of 2011, ten developers gathered in Dresden to discuss and implement the future of KDE Games. The local KDE community was represented very well by four developers, plus two from the nearby German capital Berlin.

While the local students Felix Lemke and Jeffrey Kelling used the opportunity to continue work on their own game ideas and present them to the fellow audience, newcomer Julian Helfferich committed the first bits of his work towards a level editor for KBreakOut. Friedrich Kossebau, motivated by his packaging work in the MeeGo community, assessed the playability of KDE Games on devices with small screens and touch-input and started on a patch to add fullscreen capability to all games.

Apart from these individual projects, the hottest topic (and initial incentive for the sprint) was to strengthen the bonds and to define the relationship between the different subprojects in the KDE Games community.

Dresden-based developer Stefan Majewsky spoke about his work in Project Tagaro which strives to create a libkdegames "2.0" that makes the existing codebase competitive and easier to maintain for the next few years. The other host, Josef Spillner, presented his work on the GGZ project which enables gaming over the network and creates client and server tools for managing social networks of gamers. GGZ technology is already available in a handful of KDE Games, but the existing KGGZ libraries need an update, which will hopefully be delivered by Tagaro in the near future.

Gluon, the other ongoing library effort in the KDE Games community, was represented by four developers from all over the world. Gluon delivers a comprehensive set of libraries for game development and an IDE that allows to create games with as less code as possible. The associated GamingFreedom.org website will allow game creators to share their products and gamers to interact with the creators.

Gluon uses the Open Collaboration Services protocol (OCS) for its social networking features, while GGZ implements similar features since years with a custom protocol. However, Josef Spillner committed initial support for an OCS export in GGZ to allow for integration with OCS-enabled applications like those from the Gluon project. It was agreed to collaborate on interoperable protocols also in those areas where OCS cannot be used.