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Messages - m1ac4

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76
I think its going to be naturally harder for those of us who do not have TI calculators and aren't working on the lower-level development of the Prizm for the time being.  My posting is usually directly proportional to the activity on the Casio Prizm Discussion board and it hasn't been that active recently in areas that I am able to post in with reasonable certainty that I know what I am talking about.  I guess that can't be helped for now.  I'll keep looking for ways to be beneficial in other areas of the forum.

77
Casio PRIZM / Re: Casio RPG: The age of Slime
« on: March 14, 2011, 10:03:02 am »
Made it to the boss and beat it sometime over the weekend.  I anticipate having to replace my batteries sometime this week.  ;D
This is a great start, I hope you can keep working on it!
[offtopic] @DJ_O: Most excellent timing on your last post here :w00t: [/offtopic]

78
Casio PRIZM / Re: Casio RPG: The age of Slime
« on: March 11, 2011, 07:45:31 am »
There might be a few tricks that you can use to get around the Locate glitch with special chars, I'm going to do some experimenting with one today.
Pity that we're limited to 8 colors in Basic for now.
* m1ac4 dreams of when the Locate glitch is fixed so people can make amazing basic RPGs with color too.

79
Casio PRIZM / Re: Casio RPG: The age of Slime
« on: March 10, 2011, 07:45:29 am »
I spent some time playing with this on my Prizm and it looks very good indeed.
It looks like you don't need the Default.g1s file on the Prizm (unknown file type and all, at least on a Prizm anyways).
I started experimenting with color commands with the attack functions as an example.  It doesn't look good for now due to the locate glitch but I would imagine that adding color to the Prizm version of the game should be relatively easy.

80
I have a question about regression calculations.
What I want to do is when I calculate a statistical regression in a program, I would like to automatically place the resulting equation in a Y= equation of my choice.  What I would do in TI-Basic is this:
Code: (TI-Basic) [Select]
This by default uses L1 and L2 to calculate a linear regression and pastes the resulting equation in Y1
LinReg (ax+b) Y1
How would I do this in Prizm-Basic?

81
Miscellaneous / Re: How did you find Omnimaga?
« on: March 08, 2011, 07:32:47 pm »
I figured out that it must have been fake news after I downloaded and loaded the program to realize that there must be more to the story than what I was seeing.  Then the real news came out and everything was made clear.  Hence, my introducting to WFRNG and Omnimaga.
Also I like your avatar. ;D
I just got bored and decided to write something unusual (in this case a program that displays the Hello World z80 source code). Then, I just started messing around with the image in Picture Plot.  Everything except the syntax highlighting and the "Someday..." part were created on-calc.
I look forward to getting my own computer eventually so I can tackle more of the low level programming.  The sheer potential of a full color graphing calculator (:hyper:) is mind-blowing and I would love to someday be able to take advantage of its abilities.

82
Miscellaneous / Re: How did you find Omnimaga?
« on: March 08, 2011, 07:36:19 am »
Sometime last October I searced google for something along the lines of "online ti-basic ide".  This lead me to SourceCoder and Cemetech.  One thing led to another and I eventually wound up here. 
The first news article I saw was Wacky Fun Random Numbar Generator Wins Axe Programming Contest.  I bought it hook line and sinker because I knew absolutely nothing at that time about anything. ;D
As for why I didn't join Omnimaga until several months later, well, I guess I was just really busy.

83
Casio Calculators / Re: The Inside of a Casio Prizm
« on: March 02, 2011, 04:53:44 pm »
That's what capacitors are for right?
After I learned to make sure that my calc was shut off before taking out batteries I never cleared my ram that way ever again.  (Unless for some reason the Nspire clickpad doesn't work that way... I have never actually seen a Nspire :()

84
Casio Calculators / Re: The Inside of a Casio Prizm
« on: March 02, 2011, 04:31:49 pm »
Hmm... I wonder why the OS even addresses a low backup battery issue then.
The message can be found at 0x801094E0 for all those who are interested.

85
Casio Calculators / Re: The Inside of a Casio Prizm
« on: March 02, 2011, 07:46:05 am »
Are there any backup batteries in this thing?
There's a message in the OS about replacing the backup battery when it gets low but I haven't found one yet.

86
Casio Calculators / Re: Your calculator serial number
« on: March 02, 2011, 07:36:10 am »
Just to clarify, that was SimonLothar's program-not mine (I thought I would clarify that since I used a direct link instead of a link to the post itself)
Also there are some weird test options there O.O
I spent a long time playing around with those options yesterday. ;D My favorites are switching the display between 3 and 16 bits (for the test patterns and the amazing forest picture) and shutting off the backlight entirely (just to see what it looked like).
It automatically initializes the LCD settings after you leave the test menu but I suppose that is a good thing for now.

87
Casio Calculators / Re: Your calculator serial number
« on: March 01, 2011, 03:02:39 pm »
Great!
Code: [Select]
Serial number       :  755AW0ZMA017594
Service ID          :  2sDQMK7V
OS Version          :  1.02.0200
OS Time Stamp       :  2010.1122.2053
BIOS Time Stamp     :  2010.0910.1720
Locate Glitch       :  PRESENT
I especially like the "Delete all data?" part of the first menu. :o

88
Casio Calculators / Re: Secret debug menu
« on: March 01, 2011, 07:38:14 am »
That isn't the only message that is written slightly strange either. 
Code: [Select]
      Please                         OSAREACHECK
   SD Card Remove
They are even inconsistent with how they use the word update (Update vs UP DATE)

89
Casio Calculators / Re: Your calculator serial number
« on: March 01, 2011, 07:27:03 am »
Well... I expect that this information will come from the OS data.
If anyone wants to be able to read OS data (and the on-calc memory in general) from the comfort of their calculator they can download this add-in:
http://www.omnimaga.org/index.php?action=dlattach;topic=5610.0;attach=6267
Its a basic hex viewer for the Prizm.  You just follow the instructions provided and navigate to the address specified in order to report any relevant information (when those addresses are revealed-I don't know them). 

90
Casio Calculators / Re: Your calculator serial number
« on: February 28, 2011, 02:48:12 pm »
Code: [Select]
Serial number   : 755DW11MA022115
Service ID      : dpQGFKzx
OS version      : 01.02.0200
OS time stamp   : 2010.1122.2053
BIOS time stamp : 2010.0916.0917
Locate bug      : PRESENT
Is that a Prizm serial #? (I honestly have no clue since all of them I have seen start with 755A so far and I know next to nothing about Casio's products)
If so then where did you get the service ID and time stamps from?

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