About
Xwii is software that allows you to map keys to your Wiimote, Nunchuck, Classic controller and
guitar.
Xwii has now been taken over by James Bennett and (I) Dylan Coakley. James will be taking care of
most of the Xwii development and I will help him as best I can.
Development Team
Dylan Coakley
I am a college student living in Ireland, learning how to develop software and websites.
Im in my second year of Networks + Web Design. Im really getting to like programming.
I can program with C++, Visual Basic and I have some bit of skill with bash too!
Im also quite good at webdesign already. Even though my course focuses on web
design I like to spend some of my spare time programming.
I have many other Linux projects im working on but some of them have yet to be revealed.
One of my main projects is:
http://www.photofiltre-lx.org
James Bennett
I'm currently teaching English in China because I want to know about Asian culture.
I took a couple of language courses in Chinese in university and I really like Kung Fu.
I'm learning the language and martial arts here.
I started off my University career in Comp. Sci., hoping to be a games developer,
but got pretty bored by all the abstract maths.
After taking most of the courses in my University that I was interested in, I realized that
I love to learn more than anything and decided to become a professional teacher.
Since then, I've traveled around most of Europe and a little in South America. Last year,
I was teaching in Korea and this year I'm helping to bring English to China.
I'm working on the Xwii project because I really like gaming and open source software.
I'm hoping to do some work in the IT field once I return to Canada.
My next project aside but one will be programming really fun educational games that
are completely cross platform and will take advantage of the addictiveness of video games
and repetitive exercise learning.
In the near future, I will be making a flash based game that will teach people
about evolutionary biology and then one that will make chemical bonding at the atomic
level easy and fun to understand.