![]() ![]() Members can record videos, or sound based tutorials. Members can write a new guide, or new tutorials. Members can add to, modify, or expand upon the guide. If these things are so needed, and so many people want to help BYOND, why aren't people stepping up to do this to help? Why have Tom and Lummox waste time they could spend doing things members of the site can't do by having them do the work? Just look at how much people like Forum_Account contributed. The host one means that Tom would need to officially support, and apply changes someone else made, but he's shown no unwillingness to do so. The fact it's for BYOND? The fact Tom and Lummox run it? The fact BYOND hosts it? None of those reasons seem to put the responsibility on them in my opinion. Why does BYOND need to be the one to update the guide? or make new guide material? What puts that responsibility on BYOND? What is BYOND doing to make developers take into account features BYOND doesn't have (touch-screen interaction)? Is. Once again the main point that I have mentioned comes up. In what world does that make sense?īut developers on BYOND (present or near future) won't have considered in their design Twice the work, for a smaller market than the HTML5 client offers. This is the bit, that I don't understand, with the proposal of the ARM solution. It removes the install requirement, it works on Macs, it works on Linux, it works on ANY HTML5 compliant browser. And again, has very poor traction for games development, comparatively speaking.Ī HTML5 client brings BYOND games to smartphones. Java still only manages ~80% availability on Windows, and it's backed by a company with a $45 billion equity, and it's taken them 10 years to reach that also. A ubiquity that's been broken by smartphones, and forced abandonment of flash as a platform for games dev. It's taken flash 15 years and being bundled in browsers to manage their near ubiquitous availability. Your comparison for BYOND there, is to flash, or to the Java runtime environment. ![]() You're installing the platform, in order to play a game. The issue is you're not installing the game in question, here. You need to look at the platform to understand a multiplayer online games platform naturally wants a browser based client. ![]() If "download and install" is such a barrier, can you explain the popularity of every other app in existence? ![]()
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