User:Quasar

I am Quasar, also known as James Haley. If you are reading this anywhere other than on the real Doom Wiki at DoomWiki.org, then you are on the wrong site, and you are looking at an outdated page. I am the organizer of Team Eternity, and a principal author of the Eternity Engine and WinMBF source ports. Programming is my main occupation, particularly for source ports, and so I tend to stick like glue to highly technical issues. Don't be surprised if you see me posting bits and pieces of the code in order to make a point. In real life, I do software engineering and systems integration in the health care field.

DoomWiki.org
From January to September of 2011 I was intimately involved in the process of exporting this wiki from its original hosting arrangement to its new home on MancuNET. I am an admin and bureaucrat user (via SpiderMastermind), so ask me if you need help with something.

Here are my contributions to the wiki:
 * Special:Contributions/Quasar

And here are my main interests, consisting of articles I have created or significantly rewritten/contributed to:
 * User:Quasar/Interests by topic

As of late my main focus has been on attempting to improve this site's SEO, through a general increase in article quality, differentiation of content against our parent source, and also with a variety of backend efforts including support for OpenSearch, getting good meta keyword and description tags in place, addition of custom code to generate tags, addition strategic links between pages with high hits or that will show up in response to specific search engine queries, sitemap generation, deployment of Google Webmaster tools, and resolution of ongoing issues with a lack of 301 redirects between our registered domain names causing duplicate content penalties.

April 2014 upgrade
manc and I have upgraded the installation to the latest versions of MediaWiki as of 2014-04-20, and all of our active extensions. We are now running on the newest stable release 1.22.5. Other changes and improvements were made in the process:
 * Support for the experimental MobileFrontend is in place, with automatic detection of mobile clients. The frontends can be switched between and will set a cookie to remember a user's preference.
 * New Interwiki extension allows admins to manage the interwiki table.
 * The Monaco skin is now under my personal maintenance at GitHub. I have made numerous fixes and enhancements over the last revision of the dantman fork which should keep the skin working for a long time.
 * As a result of upgrading, a lot of new wiki editing features are available, such as collapsible tables.
 * The newest version of Flagged Revisions offers more functionality, such as the ability to remove an article's reviewed status.

Doomworld
I am a moderator of the Source Ports and Eternity Engine forums on Doomworld.

Eternity
Amongst the work I have done on Eternity are several things that were, at the time, technological breakthroughs for the Doom engine:
 * I invented the concept of parameterized codepointers with dedicated argument fields (aka action functions).
 * I made the first codepointer capable of calling into a scripting engine.
 * I was the first to reach a full understanding of the R_MakeSpans crash due to scaling overflow that is present in every game based on Doom, leading to the implementation of 32-bit clipping arrays in EE (these were later superceded by/included within SoM's Cardboard renderer).
 * I created the Dynaseg system for Eternity which enables flawless rendering of polyobjects anywhere in a map.
 * I was instrumental in the creation of the UDMF standard for a new interchangeable map format that solves the problems of extension in modern source ports.

Heretic and Hexen
In September 2008, our long-running effort to see the Heretic & Hexen source code rereleased under the was successful. Thanks to Raven Software and in particular, James Monroe, for seeing the re-release through.

Chocolate Strife
As of February 2011, my joint project with Kaiser to reverse engineer Strife and reconstruct its source code with the maximum possible fidelity to the lost original has come to fruition in the form of two beta releases of Chocolate Strife, the latter of which boasts at least partial demo compatibility with the original executable. An official release is also available now along with Chocolate Doom v2.0.0.

Strife: Veteran Edition
In something of a dream come true, I was asked in August of 2014 to work on the release of Strife: Veteran Edition by Night Dive Studios, together with Kaiser. Over the next four months, we turned Chocolate Strife upside down in order to create a new remastered version of the game using Kaiser's Kex engine code. I mainly focused on bug fixes, limit removal, new gameplay features like Capture the Chalice and the dynamic automap markers, the extensive frontend menu system, and Steam integration, particularly for the multiplayer component. I am also the one who got to fix all the missing textures and open sectors in the original maps to make them GL friendly.