![]() ![]() You see this elsewhere in the gaming world. I can very well see why a company would want to put some distance between themselves and the "toys". I just doubt it's just to get some publicity. Whether it's a marketing stunt is debatable. I can see why a company does not want to be associated with "toys", that their product is a "serious" racing simulation. ![]() Yet when you talk with people outside the biz, the guy doing business apps will certainly get a lot more credibility than you, who're "only" making toys. I've seen people in business app development that went straight out of some sort of evening school and were put behind a project to create productive code, with little care about stability, safety or reliability. All that and more does not apply at all to business apps. You need considerable mathematic knowledge, you need(ed) good assembler skills, you need to know a lot about the APIs you're working with, your code is incredibly time critical so optimization is a core issue for you, etc. Have you ever been in game development? If so, what was the reaction of people outside the IT biz when you told them you're making games?Ĭreating games is usually a whole lot more complicated and requires a lot more knowledge and experience than the average business application, due to quite a few reasons. You make fun of it, but it's a real issue. ![]()
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