Nothing much there yet - but I've got some old code off my old PC, which is giving me all kinds of feelies & deffo getting GitHubbed soon!
Best of all is my software ray-tracer - I've not really looked at the code yet, but it's probably the biggest project I've written for fun rather than work, certainly was at the time, so I'm glad it isn't lost to cyber history! Giving them all a bit of a once-over / check before I upload each.
Just managed to get the Android version of a new game published. So it's now available for both iOS and Android.
It's called 'Tap On Overlap' - and the game's title pretty much gives away what the game involves. It's a bit different and has a few levels where the overlapping items move in such a way as to produce interesting geometric patterns (well to my mind anyway).
The idea was one I had a while ago, but wasn't sure how to implement it efficiently. So it had been on hold for a few years. Then when I saw a theme for a low res game jam, I started trying to do it in a 64x64 grid. This didn't really work, but gave some useful ideas on how it could be done.
Without further adieu, the promo video (the hand at the bottom indicating taps is a video overlay attempting to show what has happened, the fading in/out of gfx is moving things along quickly to fit a few examples into less than 30 seconds of video):
For basic wave file manipulation, it's solid, but the last time I touched it, it had no story for MIDI (which I don't really have the chops for, anyway).
Reaper appears to be more geared towards MIDI, so it's in a similar league to Cubase and Cakewalk, I guess. Synth music and stuff.
Good opensource MIDI software, even basic drum machines, are very thin on the ground.
"I didn't get it. BUUUUUUUUUUUT, you fucking do your thing." - Roujin Ninty Code: SW-7904-0771-0996
Reaper is a full DAW, with powerful editing and routing features and a solid selection of plugins. I use it for audio editing, music production, mastering etc. There's even decent basic video editing now. It's essentially DRM free too, made by like three people and rivals or beats most other DAWs, and asks for only £50ish after 60 days. The BBC and other professionals have started using it, no doubt the lack of bloat or bullshit makes it rather attractive, plus it's super customisable and configurable to specific needs.
My favourite software project currently, with Blender as a close second.