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TI-Nspire / Re: GBA emulator?« on: July 25, 2012, 07:19:53 pm »So there are calcs who could go up to 80 and others to 75? I hope in the future TI won't change that so it can only go up to half of that or something... (or stuff like the 84+ extra RAM pages hardware change) Not sure... To my advice, 80 MHz AHB just causes problems, sooner or later. But there are calcs whose CPU can be set at 240MHz and others at only 222MHz. That's why my CPU warning starts after 222MHz. 693
TI-Nspire / Re: GBA emulator?« on: July 25, 2012, 07:05:18 pm »Also, were you overclocking the AHB? That's the only thing that's ever caused me to lose my OS, I think. Thank you for your report. I've just updated Nover. You can still try to overclock as much as you want, but you'll be warned of the danger above 75MHz for the AHB instead of 80MHz. I should help new overclockers avoiding problems So best assumed stable config for all TI-Nspire CX is now 222MHz CPU and 75MHz AHB. You may be able to increase the CPU frequency even more without any stability problem on your handheld. Don't fear anything: you'll just get a reboot if you set it too high. But you mustn't increase the AHB frequency higher than that, as there is a high probability of corrupting your filesystem, which will cause you more trouble than a simple reboot... Download Nover: http://tiplanet.org/forum/archives_voir.php?id=3890 694
TI-Nspire / Re: GBA emulator?« on: July 25, 2012, 04:19:03 pm »That reminds me, aside from the resolution, I wonder if Doom for the GBA will look better than the Nspire one? I never tried the GBA port. I tried. It's much slower, but not as slow as the Prizm port. The graphics aren't as good because of the inferior GBA screen resolution. It seems to be less colorfull, but it might be because of the use of different textures. I've also noticed some physic differences in the 1st level. 695
News / Re: A theme editor coming for Ndless 3.1« on: July 19, 2012, 07:14:50 pm »
Do you think that it is too long to design a full replacement theme for the TI-Nspire, having to understand and customize those hundreds of widgets ?
Then the last build from Levak is for you! You can now randomize current/all colors in order to automatically build your own theme by pressing 'r' in the editor. It seems I'm lucky this evening - 1st hit on the 'r' key gave me this: Source: http://tiplanet.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=43&t=9665&p=126955#p126955 696
News / Re: A theme editor coming for Ndless 3.1« on: July 18, 2012, 10:48:20 am »
And now for the summer, please welcome the new DarkSunny theme!
Source: http://tiplanet.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=9659 698
News / Re: Extend your TI-89 display to 240x128 (TI-92 size)« on: July 18, 2012, 08:06:45 am »
A first way to add an external 240x128 screen to your TI-89 Titanium is to build an USB adapter like the one from TI:
See here for additional info: http://tiplanet.org/forum/gallery/image_page.php?image_id=1103 Note that it's mainly build around a FlashROM whose content is unknown to us - which might not be easy. Another way is to start from the internal J3 connector: See here for additional info: http://tiplanet.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=42&t=9658 699
News / nTNOC: more free space on your Nspire & Ndless installation between calculators« on: July 17, 2012, 11:58:37 pm »
TI-Nspire OS installation files are PKZIP archives. They include several useless big files which will reduce your TI-Nspire free space:
Levak had allready released the computer tool TNOC which let you remove those useless files from your TI-Nspire OS installation file. But you needed a computer, you needed to install the modified file, and you needed to redo this for each OS installation/update on your handheld... Now here comes my new Ndless 3.1 program: nTNOC! It does the same thing as TNOC, but directly on the calculator! It automatically determines and removes useless files from the installed Nspire OS file. Did you upgrade to 3.2 ? Just downgrade to 3.1 and you'll get an additional 2MB free space! Then install Ndless 3.1, launch nTNOC and you'll get another 3MB additional free space! You're not dreaming: you can gain up to 5MB! On TI-Nspire ClickPad and TouchPad with a 32MB chip and 27.8MB usable, it's awesome! Do you think it's useless on TI-Nspire CX with the 128MB chip and 115.2MB usable? I don't 5 MB more mean:
If you often install / update / remove OS 3.1 or Ndless, you can also put nTNOC in the Ndless startup folder, so that it will clean up the freshly installed/updated OS automatically and silently at boot time if necessary. But there is another wonder with nTNOC... Up to now, you couldn't send an OS from an Ndlessed calculator, although it was working when I was testing the alpha versions. The remove calculator just refuses the received Ndlessed OS. Guess what? If you use nTNOC with your Ndlessed OS, you can then transfer it between calculators without any problem! Meaning that you can now install Ndless without the need of a computer - which should healp spreading Ndless more widely in the world! It seems that the Ndless 3.1 installer has a little bug with a bad offset/size value written when it patches the OS PKZIP archive, and that nTNOC just fixes it Download: nTNOC Source: http://tiplanet.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=43&t=9655 700
Other Calc-Related Projects and Ideas / Re: TI-30XS rom« on: July 16, 2012, 03:39:06 pm »Something I wonder about that ROM is if in the future, TI-30XS support could be added to something like TilEm? But again it's not a Z80 calc, right? It's not a 8-bits Z80. It's a 4-bits T4X core from Toshiba. You've got my online emulator: http://xandrean.free.fr/T4X/TIScientific.html You'll need to provide your own ROMs. 701
Other Calc-Related Projects and Ideas / Re: TI-30XS rom« on: July 16, 2012, 06:31:14 am »
No, sorry
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Other Calc-Related Projects and Ideas / Re: TI-30XS rom« on: July 16, 2012, 06:17:17 am »
Download the official emulator: TI-Smartview 30X/34 MultiView
http://tiplanet.org/forum/archives_voir.php?id=1426 Then download this tool which will let you extract the ROM: http://tiplanet.org/forum/archives_voir.php?id=1844 703
Casio PRIZM / Re: CGDoom« on: July 15, 2012, 01:01:56 pm »- other wad files may work (I tried full wad from Doom I and Doom II on simulator - worked; another wads (Heretic, Hexen and TNT do NOT work). Hi MPoupe. I don't know which wads you've used, nor which Doom engine you are porting. nDoom is a port of the original Doom I / Doom II engine. Hexen and Heretic games are using a modified version of the original Doom engine, and their wads are incompatible with nDoom. (in Hexen and Heretic, you have an item menu and you can fly for example...) You can find a total conversion of the Heretic game compatible with the original Doom engine here: http://tiplanet.org/forum/archives_voir.php?id=3897 All consequent wads which have worked with nDoom (and so are compatible with the original Doom engine) are available here: http://tiplanet.org/forum/archives_list.php?id=Niveaux%20Doom%20Nspire Hope it helps. 704
Other / Re: TI83+ series compatible GAMEPAD!!!« on: July 15, 2012, 06:10:27 am »
I'm not sure, but I'm just trying to help you finding a way which does not require every game author to update their games.
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Other / Re: TI83+ series compatible GAMEPAD!!!« on: July 14, 2012, 07:30:42 pm »
Nice.
Have you thought of directly sending key commands to the TI serial format ? That format is supported on all flash z80/68k calculators except the TI-73. It's used by the TI-Keyboard device and by the TilEm software when it sends the ROM dumping command to the calculator for example. That way, games might not have to adapt themselves to your controller. |
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