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#visual-studio-2015 — Public Fediverse posts

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  1. Office 2016/2019, VS2015, and Windows 10 all have become EOL!

    Today is October 14th, 2025, which is the day that Microsoft ends complete support for the below four major products:

    • Office 2016
    • Office 2019
    • Visual Studio 2015
    • Windows 10

    Office 2016 and 2019 brought many changes to the office suite that made productivity easier, including improvements across several areas of the office suite, including the three most famous apps from the suite: Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, alongside all the other bundled office applications like OneNote and Visio. They were released on September 22nd, 2015, and September 24th, 2018, respectively.

    Visual Studio 2015 was released to make your IDE more powerful than before, because it brought many new features and improvements, such as more refactoring options, Entity Framework 7 preview, and better support for displays greater than 96 DPI. It was released on July 20th, 2015.

    Windows 10 was released to not only bring new features and many user-level enhancements, including redesigns, but also addresses the common complaints that users were facing at the time that Windows 8 was released, such as bringing back the older start menu style found in Windows 7 instead of the full-screen Metro screen style that Windows 8 introduced. It was promised that Windows 10 would be the last Windows version at the time of the release, which was in July 29th, 2015, before Windows 11 made its appearance in October 5th, 2021.

    Here’s the full list of the products that went out of support as of October 14th, 2025:

    If you are using one of those products found in the list, please perform the appropriate upgrades, such as upgrading to Windows 11, upgrading your PC, or using Linux, of which the latter is more economical (yet needs adaptation and/or change) (and that we recommend) than the former two, to continue receiving support.

    #news #Office2016 #Office2019 #Tech #Technology #update #visualStudio #VisualStudio2015 #vs #VS2015 #Windows10 #Windows102015

  2. Final reminder about Office 2016/2019, VS2015, and Windows 10 EOL

    As we are getting closer to the October 14th, 2025, which is going to be the day that Microsoft ends complete support for the below four major products, we are going to give you the final reminder about the below products:

    • Office 2016
    • Office 2019
    • Visual Studio 2015
    • Windows 10

    Office 2016 and 2019 brought many changes to the office suite that made productivity easier, including improvements across several areas of the office suite, including the three most famous apps from the suite: Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, alongside all the other bundled office applications like OneNote and Visio. They were released on September 22nd, 2015, and September 24th, 2018, respectively.

    Visual Studio 2015 was released to make your IDE more powerful than before, because it brought many new features and improvements, such as more refactoring options, Entity Framework 7 preview, and better support for displays greater than 96 DPI. It was released on July 20th, 2015.

    Windows 10 was released to not only bring new features and many user-level enhancements, including redesigns, but also addresses the common complaints that users were facing at the time that Windows 8 was released, such as bringing back the older start menu style found in Windows 7 instead of the full-screen Metro screen style that Windows 8 introduced. It was promised that Windows 10 would be the last Windows version at the time of the release, which was in July 29th, 2015, before Windows 11 made its appearance in October 5th, 2021.

    Here’s the full list of the products that will go out of support on October 14th, 2025:

    If you are using one of those products found in the list, please perform the appropriate upgrades, such as upgrading to Windows 11, upgrading your PC, or using Linux, of which the latter is more economical (yet needs adaptation and/or change) than the former two, to continue receiving support.

    Photo by Andrea Piacquadio

    #news #Office2016 #Office2019 #Tech #Technology #update #visualStudio #VisualStudio2015 #vs #VS2015 #Windows10 #Windows102015

  3. It turns out I *can* in fact brain hard enough!

    Considering I started this task at 10:48 and finished around six after midnight, I'm starting to smell a pattern here. Something something best work at night?

    I took screenshots of the process too in case anyone's interested.

    #ProjectSpecialK #programming #cplusplus #VisualStudio2015 #opengl #glfw #optimization #renderdoc

  4. I... don't think I can brain hard enough to add sprite batching to this thing.

    It might be a bit of work to set up and compile but if someone smarter than me could please look into adding batching to this sprite renderer, that would be *absolutely* great.

    (LINK REMOVED, NO LONGER RELEVANT)

    #programming #cplusplus #VisualStudio2015 #opengl #glfw #optimization

  5. An interesting observation: when I run a debug build of #Noxico in #VisualStudio2015, all the debug outputs in a populated town board make the game run very slow, like 20 to 30 FPS. The _exact same build_ running from #VisualStudio2019 updates the exact same town board at a full 60 FPS.

    Running it from outside either IDE also gives 60 FPS for the same board.

    I find that quite interesting. Does anyone have any insights about this?