Author | Comment |
therock003 Probe Posted: 27 May 2008 07:08 GMT Total Posts: 9 | I have downloaded vti and TiEmu but they dont seem to have emulation support for the nspire.Do you know of a way to emulate this calculator? |
BrandonW Goliath Posted: 27 May 2008 07:18 GMT Total Posts: 100 | No, we know very little about this calculator. We can't even run code or get access to its memory, let alone a ROM dump or any of the hardware documentation we'd need to write an emulator.
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therock003 Probe Posted: 27 May 2008 08:22 GMT Total Posts: 9 | Have you managed a dump though?Are the tno and tnc files on the official website dumps,or plain updates?
So you're basically telling me there's minimal progress so far...
Thanx for getting me up to date man. |
tifreak8x Administrator
Posted: 27 May 2008 11:18 GMT Total Posts: 419 | Pretty much, nothing is known about this calculator, except for a few problems with the 84+ emulation. The Nspire is still a mystery, and will undoubtable remain that way for a while longer (read, months, to years?)
--- Bringing you Pokemon, for your calculator. |
therock003 Probe Posted: 27 May 2008 11:28 GMT Total Posts: 9 | I see,and while we're on the subject,what are the differences between the nspire cas and not cas,and the ti89 titanium? |
BrandonW Goliath Posted: 27 May 2008 20:06 GMT Total Posts: 100 | No, we don't have dumps. The TNO and TNC files are encrypted OS images, which we can't decrypt.
The Nspire CAS is similar to the 89Ti. The Nspire is similar to the 84+/SE.
The difference is that the Nspires are terrible calculators and the others aren't.
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therock003 Probe Posted: 28 May 2008 02:47 GMT Total Posts: 9 | Would you care to collaborate on that?I mean its the nlatest (and supposedly the latest) while ti-89 and 84 have been out for years.
I just got myself the ti-89 and at the same time found out of the existance of the nspire and i wondered if i could have done better. |
BrandonW Goliath Posted: 28 May 2008 04:13 GMT Total Posts: 100 | They're bulky, hard-to-use learning tools that try to accomplish the same tasks as the others, but mask it all in complicated menus. They bring nothing to the table, and their OSes are incomplete and still being worked on. No coding or applications are possible, at least not yet. I could get into details, but then I'd have to pick it up, and I'd rather not.
You couldn't have done better.
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therock003 Probe Posted: 28 May 2008 04:51 GMT Total Posts: 9 | Their harware specs though are obviously more advanced,but other than that i can see that they're still experimental when they lack all the things you mentioned. |
tifreak8x Administrator
Posted: 28 May 2008 07:18 GMT Total Posts: 419 | Yeah, they should have stayed in development until they managed to make them easier to use. If nothing else, they should have given them to some college classes to try to use, and did some feedback, etc for them...
--- Bringing you Pokemon, for your calculator. |
therock003 Probe Posted: 28 May 2008 07:23 GMT Total Posts: 9 | That's sad,and they look so next gen!The ROM/RAM specs make all the difference.
NSpire 16MB/20MB Ti-89 Titanium 2.7MB/188K
Anyway thanx for your help guys. |
john777 Ultralisk
Posted: 3 Jun 2008 20:14 GMT Total Posts: 289 | I think that the NSpires will be much more popular with younger students taking algebra, geometry, and per-calc type courses. They present a very good visualization of the functions and shapes, which I think is importatnt for those classes. But I do agree that the menus are kind of a hassel compaired to the 84's set-up we are all used to. At least for now I think that they are better for younger students untill people get to know them better and they get more funtionality. |
haveacalc Guardian
Posted: 3 Jun 2008 22:40 GMT Total Posts: 1111 | Nspires are bad for everyone because TI's protected them from ASM developers.
--- -quoted directly from most movies that don't exist (and some that do). |
allynfolksjr Administrator
Posted: 4 Jun 2008 19:15 GMT Total Posts: 1892 | I totally agree with haveacalc's statement. TI certainly took a step backwards with the Nspire. :( |
BrandonW Goliath Posted: 5 Jun 2008 07:19 GMT Total Posts: 100 | Just like the other calculators, they supply the hardware and get it to the masses, that's all I care about. It's going to have to be up to us to get it to do what we want it to do.
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allynfolksjr Administrator
Posted: 5 Jun 2008 14:13 GMT Total Posts: 1892 | Maybe TI is continuing their internal betting pool on what the community can do to their hardware. So maybe intentionally crippling it for fun? :) |
BrandonW Goliath Posted: 5 Jun 2008 18:00 GMT Total Posts: 100 | Yeah, but this is not Steve and Hank's USB printer, this is a lot of time and money put into making it unbreakable. The developers have spoken out as saying they don't like it being so locked down, but that's what they're paid to do. |
allynfolksjr Administrator
Posted: 5 Jun 2008 18:23 GMT Total Posts: 1892 | And probably in TI's best interest to lock it down, now that calculators have become so pervasive in schooling throughout the United States in both classrooms and testing... if they were to continue to keep around a "hacking" community, and tacitly encouraging it, that would force schools and other administrative agencies to encourage adaption of another company's locked down system. :) |
BrandonW Goliath Posted: 7 Jun 2008 14:03 GMT Total Posts: 100 | Yeah, when we finally do get into it, this is not going to be like ZShell and lots of publicly-released programs based on bugs TI doesn't bother to fix...it's going to be like the PSP, a constant cat-and-mouse game, so until we get our foot in the door with it, things are probably going to stay secret. But that's just my prediction. |
haveacalc Guardian
Posted: 7 Jun 2008 19:59 GMT Total Posts: 1111 | In response to an email that I sent to TI about a year ago, Doug Fincher told me that they were still debating whether or not they would release an SDK for the Nspire family. My guess is... no.
--- -quoted directly from most movies that don't exist (and some that do). |
BrandonW Goliath Posted: 7 Jun 2008 20:27 GMT Total Posts: 100 | An SDK for an interpreted language more powerful than BASIC, yes. They will NEVER allow native code to run. Never.
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allynfolksjr Administrator
Posted: 8 Jun 2008 16:28 GMT Total Posts: 1892 | Never never? |
BrandonW Goliath Posted: 8 Jun 2008 21:02 GMT Total Posts: 100 | Never never. |
me2 Goliath
Posted: 10 Jun 2008 11:52 GMT Total Posts: 171 | e-mail me a copy of those tnc and tno files, and i'll see what i can do My e-mail is: analystjr@aol.com
--- <--- Going out with a bang. |
BrandonW Goliath Posted: 10 Jun 2008 16:27 GMT Total Posts: 100 | If you can't even find them yourself on education.ti.com, I highly doubt you're going to decrypt them... |
me2 Goliath
Posted: 25 Jun 2008 11:35 GMT Total Posts: 171 | I could find them, I just don't feel like doing it on my SLOW modem internet
--- <--- Going out with a bang. |