188 (referring to #34): You can do the same on WabbitEmu.
189: You can type with your eyes closed.
190: You can type with one hand.
191: You can type with the calculator upside down.
192: You can do all three of the above at once.
193: You have changed the Your batteries are low. message to
Your batteries
are low.
Recommend
antidepressants
before suicide.
194: You do the ON+[DEL] battery trick to scare your friends.
195: You have memorized the entire URL of your ticalc.org author profile.
196: You check it every day.
197: You are consistently ranked in the top 200 in at least two of the categories.
198: You have received DMCA notices from TI.
199: You didn't care.
200: You code in ASM simple programs that could have been coded easily in BASIC just for the challenge.
201: You have created your own assembler.
202: You never use it and code in hex instead.
203: Instead of assembling source code, you code in hex, then disassemble to check the accuracy of your disassembler.
205: You have thought and typed ten creative comments to add to this thread in less than a minute.
206: You could have done that on your calculator.
207: You are currently in the process of typing all of these on the calculator for an 8xg release.
208: All the games on your calculator are your own.
209: Same with the calculators of all your friends.
210: You have typed so many of these signs already, you were ninja'd by three other people.
211: You have made calculator case mods between a TI-83 Plus and a TI-89 or between a TI-84 Plus and a TI-89 Titanium.
212: You have completed #211 and end up using the TI-83 Plus family calculator in the TI-89 case, not the other way around.
213: You have a Chameleon TI-73.
214: During the height of activity on the forums, you wonder why so few people are TI calculator developers.
215: Your ASCII art uses ! instead of |.
216: You have actually used IS>( and DS<(.
217: Effectively.
218: You time your releases on ticalc.org to reflect average visitor stats.