By ananth, on July 20th, 2010
I just published my version of .NET bindings for OpenCL over on Codeplex last night. Why another, you ask? There’s already so many out there … Cloo, OpenCL.NET from hoopoe and another OpenCL.Net over at Sourceforge (and more?). Well, …
Every API out there has an object-oriented version of the API that’s easily usable from .NET. Sure, . . . → Read More: OpenCL.Net published!
By ananth, on June 8th, 2010
I recently had to upgrade the Wordpress installation on my website, and decided to do a bunch of housecleaning besides.
I’d been looking for a good content management system that allows me to keep a blog, wiki(s) and forums (across different subdomains – brahma, blog, etc.) and I couldn’t find anything easy to . . . → Read More: Website upgrade
By ananth, on October 21st, 2009
I just found out this morning that a link to the Brahma website has made it into Wikipedia (under the topic GPGPU). Cool!
The lack of updates on Brahma is because I have moved to the United States (early this month) and will be living and working here from now. It’s been crazy busy getting settled in. . . . → Read More: Brahma on Wikipedia
By ananth, on July 23rd, 2009
My interview about Brahma is up on DotNetRocks, you can find it here. I hope this helps Brahma’s popularity and remember, contributions are most welcome (samples, help getting Brahma to run on Mono on Linux)!
I’ve recently had a new idea, the concept of using user-defined types with Brahma. This should (hopefully) be out soon! . . . → Read More: Interview up on DotNetRocks!
By ananth, on July 8th, 2009
We all know .NET rocks. Apparently, the guys over at www.dotnetrocks.com thought Brahma rocks, too! Carl Franklin, Richard Campbell and I had an hour long conversation about Brahma; how it works and what the future for it is like.
It’s going to be published on the 23rd of July 2009, so watch out . . . → Read More: Brahma on DotNetRocks
By ananth, on May 18th, 2009
What does Windows 7 have to do with music? Nothing, really. But I’ve noticed that no one has been enterprising enough to put the Window 7 taskbar features to REALLY good use and make an mp3 player that we can use while we work (WMP team, are you listening?). I mean, who doesn’t listen to music . . . → Read More: Lyre – A Windows 7 music player
By ananth, on February 9th, 2009
I got married early last month, to the woman I’ve been looking for all my life. Her name is Khyati, and we used to work together when I first moved to Mumbai. Here’s an excerpt from my wedding website about her: “It’s almost two years ago I came to Mumbai, with a few pieces of baggage . . . → Read More: Just Married!
By ananth, on May 4th, 2008
One of the features I spent a lot of time thinking about, and implementing are: “deferred” ProvideValue calls on MarkupExtensions. In a XAML markup extension, ProvideValue is called when the tree is being loaded, and sometimes, it may be impossible to provide a value at that time. Also, since XAML makes use of internal classes like . . . → Read More: Markup extensions in Xoml
By ananth, on May 4th, 2008
I’ve had the XOML project registered on CodePlex since my last post, but it is now published. An early 0.1 pre-release version is also available. This version allows you to load hand-written Xoml, although XomlWriter isn’t far behind.
To get stared with Xoml, the unit tests are probably the best place to start poking around. Feel free . . . → Read More: XOML on CodePlex
By ananth, on April 22nd, 2008
Marcus Wilhelm kindly brought to my attention that the comments system wasn’t working due to a faulty spam protection plug-in I’d activated. My bad. It’s fixed now, and I’ve just started using WP Captcha-Free instead of the old plug-in, let’s see how it turns out. It seems you’ll need JavaScript enabled to comment, but then who . . . → Read More: Comments working now
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Nemo vir est qui mundum non reddat meliorem That's Latin for "What man is a man who does not make the world a better place(?)".
I'd like to believe that's my motto, and I want to do it by creating software and ideas that can help someone go to greater heights.
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