HeadlessOne
Member
Hi all,
I thought it would be cool to discuss recommendations for youtube channels related to programming/game making.
(can be other platforms too thats just my goto)
Here are some of my favorites:
Two Minute Papers - He is a computer graphics researcher who distills cutting edge research papers on soft body simulations, fluid dynamics and ai/learning algorithms down into short easily consumable videos that help give you a good over view of what is new in that space.
Sebastian Lague - He dose little "coding adventures" where he takes a topic he is interested in and takes us with him on a deep dive, his explanations and graphics are fantastic and his voice is as smooth as butter, he uses unity but provides links to all of his projects so you can download them and play around if you'd like.
Ben Eater - this one is a little less about coding and more about the witchcraft that is known as 'electrical engineering'... he makes computers (or parts of computers) from scratch on a breadboard and (personally) it has really helped my understanding of how zappy boi's of 1's and 0's turn into a gif of a cat dancing.
I thought it would be cool to discuss recommendations for youtube channels related to programming/game making.
(can be other platforms too thats just my goto)
Here are some of my favorites:
Two Minute Papers - He is a computer graphics researcher who distills cutting edge research papers on soft body simulations, fluid dynamics and ai/learning algorithms down into short easily consumable videos that help give you a good over view of what is new in that space.
Sebastian Lague - He dose little "coding adventures" where he takes a topic he is interested in and takes us with him on a deep dive, his explanations and graphics are fantastic and his voice is as smooth as butter, he uses unity but provides links to all of his projects so you can download them and play around if you'd like.
Ben Eater - this one is a little less about coding and more about the witchcraft that is known as 'electrical engineering'... he makes computers (or parts of computers) from scratch on a breadboard and (personally) it has really helped my understanding of how zappy boi's of 1's and 0's turn into a gif of a cat dancing.