I'm just waiting for dat community to start forming, Rray.de's gona need a
new category soon, fingers crossed :P

On 8 March 2015 at 02:33, Paul Doyle <technove...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Yes - writing extensions for Fabric is simple, as is wrapping an existing
> C/C++ library as a Fabric extension. There are no dependencies on Fabric
> Software to build anything, it's all there for developers to build upon.
>
> More cool stuff next week, it should get you guys thinking :)
>
> On 7 March 2015 at 21:25, Sebastien Sterling <sebastien.sterl...@gmail.com
> > wrote:
>
>> Isn't the theory, that third parties could develop modules for fabric,
>> like Lagoa multiphisics ?, or the mootzoid suites ? i'm assuming it would
>> if not now eventually become theoretically possible for someone to create a
>> flip solver for fabric?
>>
>> (I'm sure that: - One does not simply "A Flip Solver")
>>
>> Bifrost (at this point) reminds me of a famous Racing horse called
>> Shergar, it too had a great pedigree, then the IRA nicked it, and turned it
>> into burgers.(most likely).
>>
>> There is a moral in there somewhere!
>>
>> On 8 March 2015 at 00:48, Paul Doyle <technove...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Certainly for stuff like fluids they've got the pedigree :) I have only
>>> seen the public demos though, I'm keen to see what's coming.
>>>
>>> /diplomacy
>>>
>>> On 7 March 2015 at 19:36, Raffaele Fragapane <
>>> raffsxsil...@googlemail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Surely Bifrost is what you aspire for your product to be when it grows
>>>> up, right? ;)
>>>>
>>>> On Sun, Mar 8, 2015 at 5:41 AM, Paul Doyle <technove...@gmail.com>
>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> That's what the alpha is for :) We aren't wedded to a particular
>>>>> design, and we're drawing inspiration from modern systems like Blueprint.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>
>>
>

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