Life in the Gaming Industry: Confessions of an Ex Game-Developer Thursday, October 12 at 5:15 PM in 1115 CSIC
Davor Mrkoci, former EA developer and Maryland graduate, talks about how to get into the gaming industry, what life is like as a developer, what skill(z) are needed, and why people leave the game industry. Davor Mrkoci worked on The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers and The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King for Electronic Arts, Inc. He's also worked on Mad Dash Racing and Legacy of Kain: Blood Omen 2, by Eidos Interactive, Inc. Davor will also talk about why he now works at Hillcrest Labs, a startup in the Rockville area developing next-generation TV applications and pioneering free-space pointing devices. Hillcrest Labs will be interviewing for software developers and user experience/user interface design/coding positions (and for computer engineers, they are interviewing hardware people too). Please bring a resume, and look for them on Careers4Terps (aka TerpOnline). Note room change; Refreshments will be served. University of Maryland Association for Computing Machinery Student Chapter For more information about the UMCP Student ACM chapter, see our web page at http://www.cs.umd.edu/~acm/ or send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] -------------------------------------<>----------------------------------- IF YOU WISH TO BE REMOVED FROM THIS LIST: -if these emails come directly from acm please reply with remove in the subject line and include the original email header. -if you are receiving these emails through the csundergrads list (i.e. you see Csundergrads in the subject line or below), you are not on our list and we cannot remove you. If you have left the department, contact the undergrad office to be removed. if you are a current student, you are automatically on the list until you graduate. -if you are receiving these emails through the UMLUG mailing list, we apologize if you're getting our announcements three times but assume you know how to use the delete function of your email client if you wish to ignore ACM.
