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Re: [Fsuk-manchester] MFS Extraordinary Talk. Mon, 28 Nov. "Game On - Ga


From: Michael Dorrington
Subject: Re: [Fsuk-manchester] MFS Extraordinary Talk. Mon, 28 Nov. "Game On - Game Creation and Distribution with Gluon" by Dan Leinir Turthra Jensen
Date: Sun, 27 Nov 2011 19:35:45 +0000
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686; en-US; rv:1.9.1.16) Gecko/20111110 Icedove/3.0.11

This extraordinary talk is tomorrow, Monday 28th.
It should be of interest to game players and writers, free software
enthusiast, open source followers and shareable culture fans.
Hope to see you there.

On 09/11/11 22:48, Michael Dorrington wrote:
> Please feel free to forward this to those that would welcome it.
> 
> The regular monthly group meeting, which is a talk, is still happening
> on the 15th November, in addition to this talk.
> See http://libreplanet.org/wiki/Manchester/2011-11-15
> 
> * Extraordinary Talk: Game On -
>                       Game Creation and Distribution with Gluon
>                       http://gamingfreedom.org/
> 
> * Speaker: Dan Leinir Turthra Jensen
> 
> * Location: Madlab. (Manchester Digital Laboratory).
> * Address: 36-40 Edge Street, Manchester. M4 1HN.
> "(Between Thomas St and the Craft Centre, opposite A Bar Called Common)"
>   http://madlab.org.uk/
> * Date: Monday, 28th November 2011 (Extraordinary Talk)
> * Start time: 19:00
> * Finish time: 20:30
> 
> Details
> -------
> This talk is on a project where Free Software meets Creative Commons
> meets the "Gamers' Bill of Rights" <http://www.gamersbillofrights.org/>.
> (Part of this includes the recommending of non-free software licences,
> which Manchester Free Software does not endorse.).
> 
> Dan's talk description:
> 
>     "Building computer games is fast becoming big business, not just for
> the big companies, but also for the little companies. Witness the
> success of smaller studios like Rovio of Angry Birds fame (30 people)
> and Minecraft (one single person), and you can see why there is no
> reason why we cannot create games in the open source world to sit
> alongside these successes. But we need tools for this: Ways of easily
> constructing the games, modern and effective distribution methods, ways
> of getting the users' feedback and so on."
> 
>     "Enter Gluon, an open platform for creating and distributing games.
> This talk will shortly explain the ideas behind Gluon, and present the
> GamingFreedom.org network for makers and players of games. Finally a
> live demonstration of the Gluon Creator tool used to build games will
> show you just how easy it is to build games today, and why you can do
> it, without needing to know everything about game creation."
> 
> The event will include a Q&A session, discussion and then lively debate
> in the pub afterwards.
> 
> Speaker
> -------
> *  Dan // Leinir
>    o http://leinir.dk/
> 
>     "Dan, known to most people as Leinir, is a software developer who
> started out by ruining his possibilities for the next few years by
> learning Visual Basic 3 as his first language. However, from there he
> jumped later to PHP, which he worked on as a part of a Multimedia
> Designer course, and finally decided to learn properly, starting at
> Aalborg University's informatics course, which now, five years later,
> has resulted in an MSc in software construction, specialised in game and
> engine programming. His active involvement with the open source
> community began when he joined the Amarok team as usability guy in 2006,
> and finally in 2009 he joined the Gluon team. Here he helped refine the
> library layout, and was primus motor for developing the Gluon Vision, as
> well as being one of two core developers on the Gluon Engine system. In
> June 2010 he finishes his Master's Thesis, and following this he has
> moved to England, where he now resides, working for the small
> consultancy company KO GmbH on the free office engine Calligra. He, of
> course, still works on Gluon in his spare time, devoting a great deal of
> energy to that."
> 
> Location
> --------
> The meeting will take place at 7pm, at Madlab on Edge Street in the
> Northern Quarter. "(Between Thomas St and the Craft Centre, opposite A
> Bar Called Common)". The venue provides wifi. The talk is followed by an
> informal discussion in the bar opposite (A Place Called Common
> <http://www.aplacecalledcommon.co.uk/>).
> 
> Transport
> ---------
> Parking: Around the venue there are parking meter bays that become zero
> cost after 8pm on Monday so you'll have to pay up until then and the
> maximum stay is 2 hours BUT MAKE SURE YOU VERIFY THIS. There are paid
> parking lots around the venue, the light blue P in this OpenStreetMap
> centred on Madlab
> <http://www.openstreetmap.org/?lat=53.48427&lon=-2.23652&zoom=15&layers=M>.
> A lot of them, perhaps all, are are owned by NCP
> <http://www.ncp.co.uk/>. If you can't decide otherwise then park in
> Manchester Arndale <http://www.manchesterarndale.com/directions.aspx>.
> 
> Public Transport: Manchester Victoria (MCV) train station, Shudehill
> tram station and Manchester Piccadilly bus station are all fairly close
> to Madlab, see OpenStreetMap centred on Madlab
> <http://www.openstreetmap.org/?lat=53.48427&lon=-2.23652&zoom=15&layers=M>.
> Manchester Piccadilly (MAN) train station and Manchester Central Coach
> Station are not too far either.
> 
> Further details at
> <http://libreplanet.org/wiki/Manchester/GamingFreedomTalk>.
> 
> More Information
> ----------------
> General information about Manchester Free Software events can be found
> on our website.
> 
> * http://libreplanet.org/wiki/Manchester#Upcoming
> * http://libreplanet.org/wiki/Manchester/GamingFreedomTalk
> 
> If you would like five minutes to tell us about something, please
> contact us at <address@hidden>.

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