0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.
SDLWabbitemu together with nSDL is actually the nearest we can have with this idea, as Albert said, it only takes someone who is interested to porting it.
Is it just me or is the calculator window size wrong? It looks super wide in that screenie for some reason.
Guys, I already tried to port wabbitemu on the PSP:http://ourl.ca/16792The psp has a 333mhz CPU and a GPU (but I won't take the GPU in account, cause it's not very used yet).WabbitemuPSP was slow as hell: with a very low framerate.Even if wabbitemu is optimized using miscellaneous tools like gprof etc, it requires a 1ghz CPU to correctly emulate the beast.Just to tell you that don't mind porting wabbitemu on the nspire.You should therefore look at the official TI 8x emulator on the nspire: maybe is there no z80 CPU embedded in the calculator, and if so, you could port it.
The "official emulator" can't be used because we don't know much about it, and it is extremely buggy anyway. The fact that they removed it means that the management for the code is pretty bad.
Quote from: alberthrocks on September 04, 2012, 12:07:25 pmThe "official emulator" can't be used because we don't know much about it, and it is extremely buggy anyway. The fact that they removed it means that the management for the code is pretty bad.No, it means that the CX doesn't have removable keypads. I'm pretty sure the emulator still exists in non-CX OSes.
Quote from: alberthrocks on September 04, 2012, 12:07:25 pmThe "official emulator" can't be used because we don't know much about it, and it is extremely buggy anyway. The fact that they removed it means that the management for the code is pretty bad.No, it means that the CX doesn't have removable keypads. I'm pretty sure the emulator still exists in non-CX OSes.Also, ARM9 is not very competitive with x86 at all in terms of instructions per clock. There's no parallel execution or branch prediction, and I think memory access has more latency. I'm not trying to discourage giving it a shot, though.