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Author Topic: TI-Story moves to its own site -  (Read 2008 times) Bookmark and Share
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mob-i-l
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Last Login: 03 April, 2013, 15:01:10
Date Registered: 08 April, 2012, 10:52:09
Posts: 9

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« Reply #15 on: 05 May, 2012, 17:52:53 »
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@DJ_O & @burr I have not made any games for the TI-calculators yet except for Aritm. I've made some lively demo programs for drawing splines and queue simulation. I would like to make a checkers app in TI-BASIC with AI. I should also port some other programs I've written to C (e.g. Z88DK) and Asm for TI-calculators. I started programming on a Sinclair ZX81 in 1981 (my first computer) and took a programming course in high-school in ABC-BASIC for Luxor ABC 80 during the same year. Then I made a lot of games and typed in and improved others'. From 1983 I mostly coded in Forth for a few years, but learned Pascal and Fortran at university 1987 (and one assignment was to write Mastermind in Fortran 77). I also learned Z80-assembly 1985 but I haven't used it much. In 1990 I learned Unix shell-scripting (on HP-UX) and C for MS-DOS and later C++.

I tested a TI-81 in 1993 and then bought a TI-82 the same summer for a reduced price since I was working as a teacher then. I discovered some bugs in the original TI-82 firmware and got a new one (but I had to return my old). One could upload apps to TI:s FTP-site (this was before WWW) using a specially formatted email (and my files on my site still have this format).

In 1994 I started working for an electronics company that made control computers using 8051 and I developed programs to develop programs to control the control computers mostly in Visual Basic but also in AWK, SQL and C++. I built a $4-link (serial) for TI-82 about 1995. In 1995 I learned Java applet-programming and in 1996 Perl for web-servers. I've also done PIC-programming i Asm and C and Freescale/Motorola and AVR in C. I think I should connect TI-calculators to Arduino. I'm also interested in 3D CAD and simulating engines. I'm active in the ZX80/ZX81-community and collect programmable/graphing calculators and retro computers. I should also learn more about jQuery and Android-development using Java and JavaScript (using PhoneGap that could be ported to iOS). There is also BASIC! for Android and I read the manual recently. I should also learn Python, LISP and Haskell.

I will try to find the early GRAPH-TI and CALC-TI emails (I've stored them on CD-ROM but in Windows 95 emailformat so I have to install W95 on some computer).
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