Game development tutorials for beginners is just one focus of my educational channel. My goal is also to teach you how to program in JavaScript, learn advanced PHP techniques, design patterns, and other software engineering concepts. I love programming Android apps, as well as fully native HTML5 applications, games, object-oriented design and analysis, among other things. I'm all about open source development, sharing knowledge, meeting new geeks, and having fun, while at the same time helping other coders to become better at their craft. In 2013, I published the book *Learn HTML5 by Creating Fun Games* by Packt Publishing. Today I work full time at Deseret Digital Media in Salt Lake City, Utah, where I do PHP, JavaScript, and Android development. As an independent game developer, I have a license from Nintendo to develop for the Nintendo Wii U video game system, where I use the Nintendo Web Framework to write 2D games using HTML5 and related technologies.
BRO I just found THIS 🦖🥚 on the new iOS 17 update on my iPhone 14 pro max! And I also found the Astronomy Easter egg the other day trying out new screen lock wallpapers. [I was going crazy looking for this astronomy app because I’m space nerd] If you lock your screen and focus your eye on the camera, a green 🟢 dot will pop up showing your location via satellite! This is a huge battery drainer but pretty cool. Do you recommend or know of any other cool Easter eggs? I’m kind of obsessed looking for them
3:21 here's an easier way data segment Deez dw "hello, world$" ends code segment start: mov ax, data mov ds, ax mov es, ax mov ah, 9 mov cx, deez int 21h mov ah, 0ah int 21h ends end start Hope i helped(this isn't part of the code)
Thanks for making this video. I am using dependency injection with dagger and hilt but I was curious to know what is service locator pattern. Seems a lot of manual work. I'll stick with dependency injection since it's still new to me.
To be fair, that code would require an MS-DOS-compatible environment. The code simply passes a pointer to OS, and lets the OS print the text. If it actually outputted text to the screen without the OS, the code would be longer!