I'm honored to be listed among the fine folks of the GitHub Stars program, which gathers shining individuals from the world’s largest open source community, though I still think I got mistaken for someone else.
The last couple of months were tough, to say the least. They forced some changes in the plan I had for gamedev-related projects in 2020. The good thing is, given the diversification of our activities around Enclave Games, it shouldn't be that bad, although still an unpleasant shift in focus.
I've travelled to London last week to give a talk about WebXR at the FullStack 2019 conference that happened July 10th-12th in the Business Design Centre.
Another year running Enclave Games have passed, so let's do the usual summary of the last twelve months and highlight entirely missed predictions from the previous one.
This month's report will be similar to the one from June - I had a longer trip, then returned and gave WebVR talk in Warsaw, while doing js13kGames preparations.
Just a few days after my trip to JSCamp in Barcelona I was back in Warsaw giving a WebVR talk at the Front Club Open #4 meetup - a very similar situation to previous month's doublet with All Hands in San Francisco and then Fire Talk #11 about WebVR in Warsaw.
I had the pleasure to be at the very first edition of the JSCamp conference that happened last month, on July 18-20th in Barcelona.
June went through really quick because of the All Hands - first the preparations, then the actual week in San Francisco, and then the next one recovering from jetlag, and another catching up on emails and stuff.
A few days after returning from All Hands in San Francisco I gave a talk about WebVR with A-Frame at the local, Warsaw meetup.
It seems the last few months were quite intense - either because of various events, or me finally getting back at writing. April wasn't different from that too.