Crews have faced off against each other out on the water. And vietnamese have staged repeated protests against what they see as chinese aggressiveness. But now theyre leaders say theyre committing to negotiating the disputes. President xi jinping hosted special envoy in beijing. The staterun Xinhua News Agency quoted xi as saying that it shows that vietnamese leaders are wanting to improve ties. In may a Chinese Oil Company set up an oil rig near the parcel islands. Chinese and vietnamese crews converged on the area. Some rammed ships against those from the other country and votes demonstrators staged a number of protests against china. Last month the chinese removed the oil rig one month ahead of schedule, helping to ease tensions. Leaders in the philippines have their own complaints. They suspect chinese authorities have started Building Military installations in another part of the disputed south china sea. Both countries and others claim the separately islands. Last month Philippin
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Class nosel noCC 01408 q tokyoTokyo 7, Sony 6, China 4, Seoul 4, Nhk 3, Chicago 2, North Korea 2, Ukraine 2, Newsline 2, Vietnam 2, Eastern Ukraine 2, South Koreans 2, Yuko Aotani 2, Iceland 2, South China Sea 2, Fumio Kishida 1, Kishida 1, Jindo 1, Robert Speta 1, Denis Pushilin 1 Network NHK World Duration 00 31 00 Scanned in Philadelphia, PA, USA Language English Source Antenna Tuner Channel 35 Video Codec mpeg2video Audio Cocec ac3 Pixel width 704 Pixel height 480 Audio Visual sound, color
RIT students collaborate to create games with students around the globe, from Japan to Senegal RIT game design and development students participated in a virtual cultural exchange this semester. Teams collaborated with students from Japan and other countries to create game prototypes, including SkyHigh, a management game where players aim to amplify the voices of minorities in a floating city.
International travel may be limited, but it hasn’t stopped RIT game developers from collaborating with students across the world to create new game prototypes.
As part of a gameplay and prototyping class at RIT this spring, 25 game design and development students got to participate in a virtual cultural exchange with 30 students at the Japanese college Kyoto Computer Gakuin (KCG). The student teams learned about each other’s cultures and overcame language barriers and time zone differences to create projects for a global game jam.