squalyl (./9):
It is refreshing to read new topics about the ti calculators. thank you. et pas merci pour le début de kernostubnel, mais je suppose que c'est endémique au sujet
Ah, I came to it a bit late in the day
Was looking for a replacement for my venerable Casio FX-730P I've had since I was 11 or 12, first got a Casio Classpad 330 plus, then discovered not only is the basic on that slower than the ZX81 I started my programming with as a seven year old in 1982 but they refuse to make the SDK available for it to write addins, american friend recommended the TI machines
Looked at the new ones and noticed TI are actively trying to prevent people running code on the hardware they've paid for so the 68K ones seemed the best bet (plus I'm quite familiar with the amiga, have an A1200 here still) so went for those.
Got a TI-92+ as I couldn't find a v200 fora good price with a working screen, which I've modified somewhat (it's got a USB port now which just works as a grey link cable, uses an arduino nano running a protocol conversion sketch wired to the link port), then three weeks later what pops up on my doorstep for almost nothing but a near mint condition v200 so have that too now, lol, using the 92+ for AMS (so I can run GTC) and the voyage 200 with PedroM which I'm going to add a basic to, only seems to be about 8K available to play with before it exceeds 128K but given the library and editing routines are already there something that just runs in place the program you specify should be doable in 68K ASM (which I'll have to learn, was a Z80 and 6502 man myself, other than a very tiny amount on the amiga back int he day that I long ago forgot. been looking at that assembly the past couple of weeks, first CPU I've used with separate address/data registers and no INC/DEC instructions, if anyone can recommend an alternative to the Rodnay Zaks manuals for the 68000 it'd be appreciated)