OpenSceneGraph cross-platform guide

Sat 01 July 2017 ru

OpenSceneGraph guide

This article summarizes the work we did to produce OpenSceneGraph cross-platform guide.

June marked the finish of OpenSceneGraph cross-platform guide with the publishing of the last (initially planned) tutorial. The tutorial describes how to build and run sample OpenSceneGraph application in Web using Emscripten. In case you missed it, here's a link to the final application. Open it in your web browser.

We started to compose the guide in February when we successfully managed to render a simple model on mobile and web. We spent 120 hours in five months to produce ten tutorials of the guide.

We have been doing OpenSceneGraph cross-platform guide for two main reasons:

  1. Keep OpenSceneGraph cross-platform knowledge in easily accessible and reproducible form
  2. Share the knowledge with OpenSceneGraph community to make it stronger

We believe we succeeded in both. Here's why:

  1. The guide repository has more stars (aka "likes") than any other repository of ours
  2. OpenSceneGraph project leader Robert Osfield said "Great work", which means a lot
  3. The guide already has two issues

Reaching our goal of researching OpenSceneGraph cross-platform development and providing the knowledge back to the community just made us happier.

However, our journey does not stop here. Using the knowledge of the guide, we now continue to work on bringing our tools to support mobile and web, just as we promised in January.

That's it for summarizing the work we did to produce OpenSceneGraph cross-platform guide.

Category: News


iOS tutorial

Thu 08 June 2017 ru

iOS tutorial

This article describes problems we faced during the creation of iOS tutorial in May 2017.

This February we managed to get simple model rendered under iOS in just a few days. We expected to finish iOS tutorial in no time. However, the reality reminded us: it's easy to come up …

Category: News

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Pelican review

Sat 03 June 2017 ru

So far so nice. Pelican is really cool, and provides a quick starting guided to get up and running real fast.

Much more smooth than Jekyll.

I <3 Python and its ecosystem. Something is just EASIER in Python.

Category: Review

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