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	<title>Comment Feed for Channel 9 - AIE Summer Cyber Camp</title>
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		<title>Channel 9 - AIE Summer Cyber Camp</title>
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	<description> Alice Lee is an intern at Microsoft and visited with the Academy of Interactive Entertainment in Seattle as they worked on Windows Phone projects. She brings us this report.  Developing a full-fledged Windows Phone app in one week – that&#39;s pretty ambitious, right? Last week, at the Academy of Interactive Entertainment (AIE)&#39;s weekly Summer Cyber Camp, a team of talented high and middle school students set out to do just that. I followed them for one week, documenting the process of creating their 3D game for Windows Phone 7 (WP7), called Color Break. Some of the students began with minimal programming experience while others had been using C# for a few years. At the end of the week, however, they were all capable of writing code, creating graphics, and incorporating more advanced concepts such as physics into the game.&amp;nbsp; By Friday, they&#39;d finished and ported the application to the phone - just five days later (check out the app in action in the video)! It just goes to show that whether you&#39;re an absolute beginner or a seasoned expert, developing for the WP can be a simple, fun, and extremely educational process. One student, who had never even coded in C# before, began developing a first person shooter. As a college student myself, I was impressed. So, how do you get started? Well it&#39;s simple – check out http://create.msdn.com to access the plethora of resources, downloads, and tutorials. If you&#39;re a student, there are also a ton of free, easy-to-use WP-related development tools available, including: - Dreamspark (http://dreamspark.microsoft.com), to get access to Visual Studio 2010 Professional, the IDE that the students are using in this video. - The Windows Phone Student Developer page (http://www.microsoft.com/student/en/us/techstudent/handson/phone-development.aspx) for resources as well as a student developer account to get started. Alice Lee </description>
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	<pubDate>Sat, 18 May 2013 19:07:54 GMT</pubDate>
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