TI Calculators Play Movies 227
ipapusha writes "TI Calculator enthusiasts rejoice. A few weeks ago, Dan Englender released a new flash application usb8x. Usb8x is a driver that interfaces with the On-the-Go USB port in the TI-84 Plus and TI-84 Plus Silver Edition. It is designed to be used by other programmers to create drivers for a variety of USB peripherals, including a keyboard and mouse. Already, ticalc.org's own Michael Vincent has interfaced his Lexar JumpDrive to play The Matrix's famous lobby scene. (mirror) ."
Another mirror if necessary (Score:5, Informative)
http://xaxxon.slackworks.com/2005-08-16-usb.wmv [slackworks.com]
Obg. (Score:5, Funny)
*Dodges Tomato*
Re:Obg. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Obg. (Score:2)
Emacs!
No wait...
vi!
..uhm, no...
true!
9704 bytes of pure sunshine. Damn, I love running that command all day!
I must be old. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I must be old. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I must be old. (Score:5, Funny)
Then we must BAN MATH IN SCHOOLS!
Won't somebody THINK OF THE CHILDREN!?!?!?
Re:I must be old. (Score:4, Insightful)
Which might be why I always tend to be saddened by the disproportionate amount of activity in the games section of ticalc.org by comparison with the more useful projects.
Re:I must be old. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I must be old. (Score:2)
"Weapons of Maths Instruction"
Re:I must be old. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I must be old. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I must be old. (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.hpcalc.org/qonos.php [hpcalc.org]
eCos, running in 512KB SRAM and providing one month of battery life
Linux, running in 64MB of SDRAM and providing considerably more than a day of battery life
A day of battery life??
Re:I must be old. (Score:2)
Symbolic Toolbox (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I must be old. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I must be old. (710.77345) (Score:3, Interesting)
You're a young whipper snapper if you "remember" plotting a nice graphic. The true old coots will remember way back when punching in 710.77345 and turning the display upside down was about as much fun as a person could have on a calculator (this trick doesn't even work on the newer bit-mapped font-based calculators). Of course as technology improved, I wasted many an hour pl
Re:I must be old. (710.77345) (Score:2)
Um...if thats the most "fun" phrase you could come up with, I'm just going to take a stab and guess that you weren't invited to a lot of parties...
Re:I must be old. (710.77345) (Score:2)
"142 Israeli soldiers fought 15,469 Arab soldiers for 5 years for oil rights. Who won?"
On the calculator type in 142 X 15469. When you enter the "=" key the result is 710.77345. Now turn the calculator upside down for the answer!
Yeah, it's pretty lame, but remember that people still thought calculators were pretty freakin' cool. Whoa. Words on a c
Re:I must be old. (710.77345) (Score:2)
BLEEEP!! WRONG! (Score:2)
"All I want is a calculator that can calculate".
or something.
Re:I must be old. (Score:2, Funny)
I must be ancient. I remember a time when calculators were used to do calculations and graphs were done point-by-point on graph paper. It's much harder to fudge a calculator graph.
Of course, I had a calculator that was so old that it had red LEDs for the display. Occasionally I had to smack it against the table to make the display work properly. My friends called it "Slappy". Who
Youngin (Score:2)
Nice cool orange color.
The 2nd was green, some other sort of gas type display..
Re:I must be old. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I must be old. (Score:2)
I just pulled out my old calculator (AKA slide rule) and can't find the plot function - can you point me to the hack that enables that function?
Re:I must be old. (Score:2)
And others are no doubt older than I ...
Re:I must be old. (Score:2)
almost obligatory... (Score:3, Funny)
iCal Rumour (Score:4, Funny)
I hear there is a rumour Apple are thinking of releasing their own calculator to help spur iBook sales in schools.
The iCalc has the same number of buttons as a TI-84, but as consession to asthetics, they arn't marked but are instead all a single unified service in a 'brushed metal' finish. Thankfully, contrary to some initial concerns that were expressed, this turns out not much of a problem because it's been intentionally optimised to perform and output the result of a single operation operation (6 x 7), additional operations having been removed so as to avoid confusing novice users.[1]
[1] Though further rumours abound this is in no small part due to the sourcing of Intel for the core chip design and that unresolvable heat disspation problems cropped up when attempting more complex operations. In fact, internal testers have reported that after extended usage, they have noted rounding errors in the units they have received (resulting in the system displaying a result for the calculation of 41.999 (recurring)).
old school (Score:3, Interesting)
needs color (Score:4, Funny)
Re:needs color (Score:1)
Re:needs color (Score:1)
closer to running OSX...
Re:needs color (Score:3, Funny)
My god the ultimate nerd activity. I am a GENIUS!
Damn! (Score:2)
Re:Damn! (Score:2)
I had the giant disk drive (Peripheral Expansion Box), but it never quite worked right.
Re:Damn! (Score:2)
In other news (Score:5, Funny)
Re:In other news (Score:2)
Master Plan (Score:1, Funny)
2) Make calculators that play movies
3) ???
4) ???
5) Profit
Nice, but... (Score:1, Informative)
Just Because You Can (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Just Because You Can (Score:3, Funny)
my EYES!!! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:my EYES!!! MOD PARENT FUNNY :-) (Score:2)
What a pity (Score:4, Funny)
I don't want to start a holy war here, but what is the deal with you TI fanatics? I've been sitting here at my freelance gig in front of my calculator (a TI-89) for about 20 minutes now while it attempts to invert a 7 by 7 matrix. 20 minutes. At home, on my HP48 running at 4 Mhz, which by all standards should be a lot slower than this TI, the same operation would take about 2 minutes. If that.
In addition, during this matrix inversion, The calculator will not work. It has ground to a halt. Even BBEdit Lite is straining to keep up as I type this.
I won't bore you with the laundry list of other problems that I've encountered while working on various TI calculators, but suffice it to say there have been many, not the least of which is I've never seen a TI that has run faster than its HP counterpart, despite the TI's faster chip architecture. My Casio FX-100 runs faster than this 12 Mhz machine at times. From a productivity standpoint, I don't get how people can claim that the TI is a superior machine.
TI addicts, flame me if you'd like, but I'd rather hear some intelligent reasons why anyone would choose to use TI calculators over other faster, cheaper, more stable systems.
Re:What a pity (Score:4, Insightful)
I like the TI-89 because it's easy to use and supports symbolic math. But to be honest with you, Texas Instruments has done absolutely NOTHING to upgrade the hardware to something modern. Oh yes, they think people will just keep buying their 1995 dated technology.
Come on! We have Gameboy's with color screens with more horespower than any of these calculators! It's pathetic that there are no new calculators of any significance being released now.
Re:What a pity (Score:2)
Because there is so much invested in the current architechture. TI only just switched to 68K and they threw away 10 years of product development to switch to 68K in the first place.
Re:What a pity (Score:2)
But to be honest with you, Texas Instruments has done absolutely NOTHING to upgrade the hardware to something modern. Oh yes, they think people will just keep buying their 1995 dated technology.
HP is the same way. I've been using my HP48SX since I bought it back in 1994, and I still use it daily at work. A couple years ago I had a sudden panic as I realized that if my SX died I wouldn't have a replacement, so I went off to Frys to get a "new" HP calc. Well I ended up getting a 48GX, which apparently has
Re:What a pity (Score:2)
Maybe because they aren't needed? Current HP and TI calculators are more than powerfull enough for school use. The only way to increase sales there is to add crappy features (cfr. cell phones). Few people I know use a calculator professionally, instead they use matlab, mathematica, octave, the Windows calculator, bc or even excel. I occasionally use my TI86, but no longer for matrix inversions etc. On the other hand the
Re:What a pity (Score:2)
Troll successful! Unless, you know, BBEdit Lite really does run on a TI-89...
Re:What a pity (Score:3, Insightful)
TI is pushed *hard* in schools. You get an HP, and when going to try to explain something to a teacher, they'll look at you like you've grown a 2nd head when you start punching in RPN. Especially the younger generation of teachers coming up that were raised on TI.
Also, have you looked at a modern high school math textbook? The ones I used were designed to be used with a TI grapher. Down to not discussing what you were doing, but just giving button pressing sequences.
I use Mathmatica myself nowadays,
AWSOME (Score:4, Funny)
I don't need these anymore! I've got my TI-84!
Dithering (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Dithering (Score:2)
Re:Dithering (Score:2)
Re:Dithering (Score:2)
Hrm, no greyscale? (Score:3, Interesting)
Hmmm. (Score:3, Funny)
Behind the scenes of Slashdot. (Score:4, Funny)
ScuttleMonkey: Hey, why don't we post this story about using calculators to play movies. Some guy played The Matrix on his TI, it's just the excuse we need. Now everyone who visits the homepage will see the icon and think 'Wow, something about The Matrix! I am interested in that story.'
CmdrTaco: You know, that's just crazy enough to work. Well done ScuttleMonkey, when you get home tonight there'll be another storey on your parents' house. You can finally move out of the basement. Now, all we need is some news on The Hobbit movie and the One True Ring will shine on the homepage for all to see!
Disclaimer: Post written under influence of a few Pub Quiz beers.
- HM
Preview version (Score:5, Funny)
N=NEO
G=GUY
T=TRIN
Act One:
N G
|-R ~~~~~~*X <- Bullet time
/\ /\
Act Two:
|---Nice shot.
|
T
B <----- N
/\ |
|---"Whoa. Nice Latex"
Act Three:
>-Z
|---- "Whoa. Nice punch"
Could've done it in 3 lines of RPN, incidentally.
Been there, done that (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.ticalc.org/archives/files/fileinfo/150/ 15079.html [ticalc.org]
Remove the space from the URL I guess.
Of course, USB is nice and all, but the video-on-calc thing has been done before. By me
It's nice and all but... (Score:2, Funny)
TI calculators break the rules (Score:2)
Re:TI calculators break the rules (Score:2)
Re:TI calculators break the rules (Score:2)
Re:TI calculators break the rules (Score:2)
Although I am puzzled why an exam board would allow any device with 180K of storage memory into an exam room.
Re:TI calculators break the rules (Score:2)
I had exams like that. Deadly time limit, deadly difficulty of the tasks when it comes to "manual solution", the only way to pass is to have the programs ready on your calcualtor/pocketPC/palmtop/whatever, enter the data, write down the answer. Definitely no time for manual solving. If you had the programs, it was a milk run, just typing data, writing down answers (rather hurriedly though). If you didn't have a program for a given task, hard luck. With 15 t
Re:TI calculators break the rules (Score:2)
Re:TI calculators break the rules (Score:2)
Re:TI calculators break the rules (Score:2)
Re:TI calculators break the rules (Score:2)
But I agree with your point - it is nice that I don't have to change batteries more often than once a year or so.
Re:TI calculators break the rules (Score:2)
Well, the progress can go in 2 distinct directions. The calculators could be 50 times faster while eating up batteries in 5 minutes. Or to remain at the same speed, but have the batteries hold 50 times longer. Or have the progress ballanced, and be 5 times faster, with 130% of the original battery life.
It seems nothing of this is happening though.
I use accumulators so I don't really care about the battery life that much (as long as it's >1week) but when you write a pro
brag about an older TI hack (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:brag about an older TI hack (Score:2)
Ok, so how hard is it to land your room on the Moon? And didn't it get damaged if you crashed?
Pixelicious! (Score:2)
404 NOT FOUND (Score:2)
TI vs HP (Score:2)
Here are a few suggestions:
1) HP were winning at the top end, but paid insufficient attention to the bottom end. TI got the cheap school market, and once graphing calculators became a cheap commodity, the top end evaporated, and TI held the bottom.
2) RPN was loved by many geeks, but presented too much of an entry barrier to neophytes. HP tried to counter
Re:TI vs HP (Score:2)
Re:TI vs HP (Score:2)
Part of the cost of the calculator is employing the wizards that actually craft the software that run on these calculators. They do absolutely amazing things with the power they have.
Re:You're partly right (Score:2)
But they're slipping on this last point; thankfully they know it. Hopefully are doing something about it
Yeah. They DRM the printer cartridges. And increase ink efficiency while decreasing ink capacity, so instead of printing 500 pages with one 48ml cartridge you can print 100 with a 5ml one (and pay the same per cartridge). And yes, they are doing something about it. "Cut the dead branches".
TI? Pshaw. (Score:2)
Comments and Google (Score:5, Interesting)
* First: Thanks Google. usb8x is a Summer of Code project. Google's support meant I didn't have to find a real job.
* A greyscale movie would definitely have been better than a B&W one. But the point of Michael's demo was proof of concept for a mass-storage device driver. That's pretty darn impressive as it is, in Z80 assembly with no OS support. I'm sure someone will come along and write a pretty version soon.
* Some more details about the hardware platform: The TI84 Plus has a 15 MHZ Z80 CPU and a 96X64 monochrome display. You can fake greyscale pretty well by swaping planes. It has a 2-bit serial port, and a full-speed On-The-Go USB port. Unfortunately the OS doesn't provide any support for USB device drivers.
* OK, so I'll admit: this was mainly done for the "it's cool" factor. But there are useful applications. As silly as it may sound to you, students these days do plug in keyboards to their calculators to take notes on. Or at least TI would certainly like them to, and now they don't have to buy the ridiculously expensive TI branded keyboard to do so. And TI calculators are actually quite useful if you're in the field collecting data with a Vernier probe. Now you can carry along a USB thumb drive and not worry about running out of space for your data.
* Besides, it's cool
-Dan Englender
Never wanted to see this day (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Never wanted to see this day (Score:4, Informative)
Yawn... (Score:3, Funny)
This was almost interesting, but then I noticed that there was a strange pattern in the wood in my desk and I got distracted.
What were we talking about again?
Perfect Demo Material! (Score:2)
Isn't this backwards? (Score:2)
What's wrong with making a program for palm pilots that make them into TI calculators?
Nice hack..but... (Score:2)
I'd put this in the Minix on a toster category.
(It's still a pretty cool geek trick though)
Re:what cpu? (Score:2)
I have personally had problems take more than 30 minutes to solve on the 89. Plotted ODEs which took 10 minutes to refresh, etc. Things that didn't matter enough to break out the cursed Matlab.
More common, using a solve function on a rotation matrix can take a few seconds (more than 10, less than 60), but is something I commonly do with the calculator.
The 89 is actually as powerful as most thousand+ dollar math packages. Matlab requires a
Re:what cpu? (Score:2)
Re:what cpu? (Score:2)
That would rock.
Re:what cpu? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:what cpu? (Score:2)
The HP-49G+ uses a 75 Mhz Dragonball, but most of the OS is emulated Saturn code, so some of the math is just amazingly fast, while most of the stuff is just reasonable.
(If I rember correctly, the problem I was trying to solve was solve((a*x^2+b*x+c)*y^2+(a*x^2+b*x+c)*y+a*x^2+b*x+ c=d,{a,b,c}), or something close to that.)
Re:what cpu? (Score:2)
And that is using 's1,c1,s2,c2...' etc instead of (sin(a), sin(b)) etc.
Wasn't shocked to not get an answer.
And yeah, I am hoping to hear of a 'suped up' 89 one of these days. Maybe I should check out the HP, but damn I would hate to have to get used to yet another input device
Cheers
Re:what cpu? (Score:2)
The best thing about the HP-49G? For people like me who came from a HP-38G in high school I could use the normal algebraic mode instead of being forced to adapt to RPN of the 48G. Yes I know real men use RPN but I couldn't adapt to it.
*sigh*
Brings me back.
Re:If you can watch the Matrix... you can also wat (Score:2)
Already done, years ago. Back in 94/95 a friend of mine had 'porn images' on his calculator. I remember being impressed that they actually pulled off shades of gray with the imagery. Turns out they did a neat flickery trick with the image to simulate that.
Sadly, the lack of image quality on the porn made the shades of gray more interesting. Still, it made the nerd clique a little more popular for a day or two.
Re:I need a serial term for TI Calculators (Score:2)
Re:I need a serial term for TI Calculators (Score:2)
Re:I need a serial term for TI Calculators (Score:2)