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Messages - critor
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661
« on: August 03, 2012, 01:40:51 pm »
Maybe you should be a little more specific with the warnings, like for CPU overclocking "May cause reboot", and for AHB overclocking "May corrupt filesystem"
I'll check if I can make this fit someway. Do I let the AHB warning level at 75MHz ?
662
« on: August 03, 2012, 01:25:52 pm »
663
« on: August 03, 2012, 01:22:46 pm »
Nice work here as always Calc84manaic. A thank you to Critor for making videos. I am curious though, in the videos, was the Gameboy's screen brightness on max?
I don't think you can really set the screen brightness on a Game Boy Advance SP. You can just turn the light on or off. And it was on.
664
« on: August 03, 2012, 01:19:42 pm »
For the moment, you can't. But you can start the game at whichever map you want, and you can save and load your progression whenever you want
665
« on: August 03, 2012, 01:05:30 pm »
@TheNightenedOne correct. @critor I got Nover as well to help speed up the emulation by whenever I open Nover, my calculator reboots. This is similar to gpsp-nspire except my calculator reboots on exiting.
You might have an older Ndless 3.1 build, which does not support the startup feature used by Nover when you open it.
666
« on: August 03, 2012, 11:50:25 am »
Nover doesn't work? What do you mean ?
667
« on: August 03, 2012, 08:32:04 am »
This looks awesome! Side note: critor, what game is that?
The game from the 1st video is based on the Inu Yasha japanese anime from Rumiko Takahashi, who has created other mangas which might tell you something like Ranma ½, Maison Ikkoku, or Urusei Yatsura (Lamu in french).
668
« on: August 03, 2012, 06:53:22 am »
What was your AHB clock speed?
74 mhz
edited: now only freeze the calculator, and require manual reset
Lower CPU to 216MHz and AHB to 72MHz and tell us about it. You might also try to keep your CPU at 222MHz but lower the AHB to 55MHz. It seems we're straight on the limit for some hardware revisions. The CX CAS hardware revision C I used for my video tests was running fine with CPU@222MHz and AHB@74MHz, but it was immediately freezing if I set the CPU to 228MHz and AHB to 76MHz.
669
« on: August 02, 2012, 10:02:15 pm »
Another different video-test for you:
670
« on: August 02, 2012, 08:16:49 pm »
Calc84maniac has posted today in this Omnimaga topic a first alpha build of his Game Boy Advance emulator for the TI-Nspire CX. Yes, no support for older Nspire models but they are limited by their 32MB RAM chip filled by the OS and I had allready found out that you couldn't malloc more than 4MB on those. Allmost no commercial GBA ROM is going to fit in that. And anyway, you woudn't have been able to see anything on the crappy screen! On TI-Nspire CX with the 64MB RAM chip you can malloc up to 33-34MB, so even 32MB GBA ROMs should fit! Named gpSP-Nspire, the emulator is a port of a GBA emulator for the Sony PSP, one of the rare GBA emulators written in C Ansi (as Ndless doesn't currently support C++). The TI-Nspire CX screen is so awesome to render GBA games, much better than the Game Boy Advance SP one! Now about speed, as you can see in the following video tests, GBA games are perfectly playable but slightly slower than the real hardware. But the emulator can run allmost on par with a real Game Boy Advance if you give your TI-Nspire CX a little overclocking boost with Nover. You can check a french tutorial about how to safely search and reach the best config for your TI-Nspire CX with Nover there: http://tiplanet.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=15&t=9014Have a nice summer with gpSP-Nspire!
671
« on: August 02, 2012, 07:23:32 pm »
You probably have noticed that once you install Ndless on your calculator, you can't send the OS to another handheld In a previous news, while developping nTNOC, the tool to free up to 5MB on your TI-Nspire, I had figured out the problem. The Ndless installer does inject some code in your hidden OS file (/phoenix/install/TI-Nspire.tnc) as you could notice in nTNOC: But it does not update the file size in the header: So the receiving unit is announced a file size which does not match, and rejects the OS at the end of the transfer. nTNOC was fixing the problem while modifying your OS file, but only if your OS could be optimized. There was no way to fix an allready optimized OS That's why I've just released for you a very light version of nTNOC code called nPatch. It just checks the size in your OS file header and fixes it if it's wrong You can now send your Ndlessed OS to other TI-Nspire Source with additional informations: http://tiplanet.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=10183Download: http://tiplanet.org/forum/archives_voir.php?id=6616
672
« on: August 02, 2012, 07:18:43 pm »
You probably have noticed that once you install Ndless on your calculator, you can't send the OS to another handheld In a previous news, while developping nTNOC, the tool to free up to 5MB on your TI-Nspire, I had figured out the problem. The Ndless installer does inject some code in your hidden OS file (/phoenix/install/TI-Nspire.tnc) as you could notice in nTNOC: But it does not update the file size in the header: So the receiving unit is announced a file size which does not match, and rejects the OS at the end of the transfer. nTNOC was fixing the problem while modifying your OS file, but only if your OS could be optimized. There was no way to fix an allready optimized OS That's why I've just released for you a very light version of nTNOC code called nPatch. It just checks the size in your OS file header and fixes it if it's wrong You can now send your Ndlessed OS to other TI-Nspire Source with additional informations: http://tiplanet.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=10183Download: http://tiplanet.org/forum/archives_voir.php?id=6616
673
« on: August 02, 2012, 06:03:45 pm »
Ok as promised, video is now ready for you. Running the same game simultaenously on both TI-Nspire CX & Game Boy Advance SP. 1st part of the video: original TI-Nspire CX speed (base 264MHz, CPU 132MHz, AHB 66MHz). 2nd part of the video: safe overclock of the TI-Nspire CX (base 222MHz, CPU 222MHz, AHB 75MHz). TI-Nspire CX is slightly slower than the Game Boy Advance SP in the 1st part, but almost on par with it in the 2nd part Note that depending upon your own TI-Nspire CX, you might be able to overclock further without any problem.
674
« on: August 02, 2012, 04:13:39 pm »
Congratulations! Compared to a real Game Boy Advance SP, the screen is just awesome on the Nspire CX!
675
« on: August 01, 2012, 01:50:28 pm »
All my TI-Nspire CX nDoom demos for you: &feature=plcp &feature=plcp &feature=plcp &feature=plcp &feature=plcp &feature=plcp
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