Thanks guys
I think back to an old december 2003 iterview, and
understand the sdk will come via steam, i might see if
some one could upload a gcf, for me to use at home
I am also useing .net 2005, its free, so i'm gona use
it till it dies
Adam
=
http://ammahls.com
...that has to be the dumbest idea ever.
- Bruce Bahamut Andrews
John Bellone wrote:
Bruce Bahamut Andrews wrote:
...I think it's fairly obvious that VALVe would never make the internet
-required- for the boxed version of Half-Life 2, that'd be suicide. The
steam-downloaded version would be
on your product
just like many other products. Steam offline mode will still work.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Bruce Bahamut
Andrews
Sent: 25 October 2004 14:26
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [hlcoders] Coders Update for Source Mods
Of Bruce Bahamut
Andrews
Sent: 25 October 2004 15:49
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [hlcoders] Coders Update for Source Mods???
First time activations have never worked. Windows XP had one, Adobe
Photoshop CS had one, hundreds of programs have had them, yet each and
every single one of them has
ridiculous, that installer need to download data with file and printer
sharing ,the SMB protocol ,on port 445.
Lets me thing.. humm.. I am not THAT stupid to open file and printer
sharing to internet. Or I am?
Bruce Bahamut Andrews wrote:
Microsoft Visual Studio 2005 Beta.
Also, there is no Go
I got the offline instalers, along with the offline
PLATFORM SDK, it all works
Its also better then the VC6 LE, where you built
something, but was ONLY able to run it in the
enviroment, this version is better
=
http://ammahls.com
__
Do you Yahoo!?
Yahoo!
Well it'd be stupid of Microsoft to release a beta of software that
costs ~1000 dollars brand new and let people develop software with it
for their own purposes... It is, after all, just an extended test :/
- Bruce Bahamut Andrews
tei wrote:
ridiculous, that installer need to download data with
Microsoft doesn't really make money off their development tools.
Traditionally Microsoft would only try to break even with some of their
development costs for the tools. Microsoft also knows that by releasing
this slightly slimmed down version of their development enviroment they
can get people
Yea well, I'd be surprised if you were legally allowed to distribute
whatever you create with your beta software, seeing as you can't do that
with educational versions of older software still.
- Bruce Bahamut Andrews
Lyme wrote:
Microsoft doesn't really make money off their development tools.
Under their license you can not legally distribute what you have
'compiled' with the beta software, nor can you use it in a buisness
enviroment . Even so you can develop a full product in a hobby setting
using them and have someone with the full software 'compile' the
distributable for you.
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