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Messages - Dapianokid
586
« on: March 16, 2013, 11:15:11 pm »
Keep the peanuts coming, and invite even invite more members, I'm collecting a surplus. I'll accept boiled! This topic now requires peanuts to post in. Dapianokid <3's Rachmaninoff, Liszt, and Godowsky more than Chopin or Gershwin. epic7, try some Alkan to get into the realm of Lisztian music He is the bridge composer between the period right at the start of romantic piano and the end of romantic piano. Pianist, indeed. What are you people willing to pay for a TI 83+SE? [...] Sorunome, I see you've had some experience with the brainf*** language. [...] I only got temprary the community addicted to it
Please link to the topic!
587
« on: March 16, 2013, 04:31:26 pm »
So in general, the nSpire is the best one. Especially for a person like me, as every project out there for the nSpire is stuff I LOVE to do. I have done a lot of work into hacking Nintendo Wii's without having the help of cheaty things like LetterBomb. I'm excited about things like Linuks, (That is the Linux project for the nSpire, correct?), nDless, and gbc4nSpire. also, the z80 emulation for the CX is basically what I've been waiting for before I bought one. Hopefully, by the time my birthday money is within my grasp, a TI83+ emulation may be possible. Is there anywhere I can get a little bit of info on emulating one of these nSpires, or do I need to buy one and dump a ROM/the whole NAND? I see USB documentation on it is being quickly written! Also, HP emulators are out there, right?
588
« on: March 16, 2013, 03:42:24 pm »
I play pokemon like I breath. I'm good at it and I do it all the time. I played this game hardcore and within about 5 hours I had impressive stats. I was sad when the game maxed out!
589
« on: March 16, 2013, 03:40:18 pm »
I'm glad they will! Sorunome, I see you've had some experience with the brainf*** language. The peanuts are piling up. I can't eat them this quickly! I am a classically trained/self taught pianist. Mostly self taught, to a level that would actually be considered freaky, and then I decided to get a teacher. I'm really, REALLY starting to get into calculators.
590
« on: March 16, 2013, 03:37:44 pm »
Well, this escalated quickly! This topic is obviously one where everybody has opinions. It looks like people who have both prefer the Prizm for programming. Oncalc programming is what I was hoping for, as I have limits on how long I can spend on the computer per-day. I am, however an apt hacker and would love to help or at least see what I can find out as for the people here at Omnimaga. I only need a disassembler Ndless, as well as a Linux port for the nSpire, USB research for the nSpire, and things of that nature are right up my ally. I will eagerly learn any programming language. I don't usually contribute with programs as much as I simply come up with the information needed to write them. HP calculators look like a significantly different.. realm of handheld devices. I'd like to spend time with an nSpire/Prizm first. The CSE will only be a novelty when I get one, really, as I usually like devices with better hardware. I'm learning a lot, and I'm going to be a busy programmer as I progress in my pursuits of calculator programming! I think that the nSpire is calling me to hack it better. I want to make it easier for people to develop for, and less scary to start out as a programmer on. The Prizm isn't as well documented as the nSpire series is, so it's less of an attraction for me. DJ_O did a nice job explaining the calculators, and FF is here to help even more! What do you recommend, to learn as a programming language? Because hacking doesn't require that knowledge as much. Hacking is finding little quirks and exploiting the fudge out of them, at it's roots. And, which calculator to use to learn it? I'm a TI-Basic expert and Axe amateur. I cannot wrap my young mind around ASM, yet.
591
« on: March 15, 2013, 09:12:07 pm »
I was hoping for this whole debate/discussion to take off between you experts soI can decide. Keep it up! If the OS is upgraded in the nSpire, am I suddenly going to have to update corresponding C or LUA programs? Because I don't wanna have to consider my stuff obsolete! The Prizm may be where I should go, but in all honesty, I want an nSpire because more has been written for it, there is a ti calculator (other than the built in one) emulator well under way which I hope will have a throttle setting, and a GBC emu. The Prizm is cheaper, but if I get a lot of birthday money, and buy a Prizm, I won't have anything to spend leftovers on, and my father will definitely lose track of the savings before the next year comes and I can buy one. I plan on getting a CAS and then a CSE next year. If they come out with a ti84+/GBC emu for the Prizm, I'll bite my tongue and wish I had bought it. Is nDless a difficult process?
592
« on: March 15, 2013, 03:54:11 pm »
I've been looking at the nSpire and discovering that the Prizm is hyped, and although it panders to the desires of Cemetechians (who love a challenge), it is not my dream calc.
Thank you for the article! Extremely helpful.
593
« on: March 15, 2013, 03:18:58 pm »
Free complementary peanuts! I picked the right forum! I own 2 ti83+ BE's, a ti83+ SE (That I'm looking to sell for about 80 bucks.), a ti84+SE, and soon either a prizm or an nspire CX
594
« on: March 15, 2013, 02:57:04 pm »
The game, after maxing out any stats past 255, will set them down very low. It also has no protection against continuing a game without having started one, which makes for an interesting way of exploring the RAM contents of the calculator So, if I have a Pidgeot at level, say, 75, it's health will be so high, it will be (something like, this is just a random guess) 287 and thus it rolls over to a number like 287 - 255 = 32. I don't like going into battles against level 50 pokemon and losing my best one in the first hit.
595
« on: March 15, 2013, 02:53:10 pm »
596
« on: March 15, 2013, 02:50:59 pm »
Dapianokid signing on to Omnimaga! I'm a pianist, as my name suggests, and not an amateur, either! Calculators are my alternate hobby, and many people here know me from Cemetech. I like the younger peer group, here, though. Hey, admins! Wanna help me with my username? It obviously has a problem: I've somehow switched up my username and email! OH NOES!
597
« on: March 15, 2013, 02:47:51 pm »
Thanks, Hayleia. Turns out I registered with my email a while ago, and will forever be open to spamming now because it is exposed. Oh well. The Nspire has Ndless, doesn't it?
598
« on: March 15, 2013, 02:18:03 pm »
I have already posted a topic at Cemetech that helped me get my head around the pros and cons between the 84+CSE, and the Casio Prizm. However, my third option, the Nspire CX CAS, isn't an accepted calculator among the members of that community. Which one, the Prizm or CX CAS, to a programmer new to C, math student in Alg 2 and Pre-Calc, and a teenage calculator game enthusiast, would you guys suggest? Expert and experienced feedback appreciated!
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