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Experiment 1I changed, in the code, 631 to 632. I was editing TI-Nspire-2.1.0.631.tno and in the code (hex to string) it said 'TI-NSpire.tno 2.10.631'. I changed the '631' to '632'. Tried putting it in my calculator and it said corrupted.Experiment 2->30I tried changing half-bytes, so 'DB' to 'DA' and stuff like that, also tried changing entire bytes, I made, in the overall, more than 30 different attempts to changing the OS (half-bytes!). All of them, Computer Link software said 'corrupted'.
Not only a checksum, don't you also have to factor the 1024-bit signing keys?
The other day I decided to experiment changing the TI-NSpire OS to something made by me. Of course I knew that I had to study the OSs made by Texas Instruments first, it's what I did.I don't know ARM9 Assembly, so all I could do were some tiny experiments:Experiment 1I changed, in the code, 631 to 632. I was editing TI-Nspire-2.1.0.631.tno and in the code (hex to string) it said 'TI-NSpire.tno 2.10.631'. I changed the '631' to '632'. Tried putting it in my calculator and it said corrupted.Experiment 2->30I tried changing half-bytes, so 'DB' to 'DA' and stuff like that, also tried changing entire bytes, I made, in the overall, more than 30 different attempts to changing the OS (half-bytes!). All of them, Computer Link software said 'corrupted'.Conclusion and QuestionsHas any of you successfully changed anything in any of the OSs?How come the Computer Link software be so good at detecting corruptions (Internet connection?)?.My next experiment will be bit-changing, I'll open the binary of it, and change 1 bit in the code, then I'll see if Computer Link Software still states it as corrupted.
The checksum makes sense, thanks."Not only a checksum, don't you also have to factor the 1024-bit signing keys?"What is that?
@Stefen: Yup.