Cracks and Patches and Fixes, Oh My!
Posted by Nick on 17 August 2000, 18:06 GMT
Julien Muchembled has released some good ole' back-to-school patches for all you fun-loving folks out there. And, now, in the fourth unsorted list in as many news items, here's what you've been missing for the past three hours!: - TIB Receiver for the 89 and the 92 Plus. This happy little number allows the user to load a ROM that TI hasn't signed onto your calculator. As a result, files like Wormhole's OpenOS can now be actually loaded onto your calculator. This offers a world of help in the next application we have for you to gape at:
- Maxmem v2.10, aka "Your Sole God," for the 89 and the 92 Plus. Maxmem's added support for AMS v2.05 also comes with a bit of a snafu: there's now a computer-based patch utility for the user, because of the relative instability in patching a ROM on-calc. As a result, you now patch your ROM before sending the patched product to the calculator with - guess what - TIB Receiver! It all comes full circle, see? Diabolical!
- HW2Patch v2.20, aka "Also Your Sole God," for the 89 and the 92 Plus. Patching your calculator with HW2Patch is now the same as with Maxmem: you patch it on your computer and you send it to your calculator with TIB Receiver.
Also, I'm gonna let Thomas Nussbaumer take the mic for a second: Please archive TI-Chess before starting on AMS v2.04 or greater, otherwise your calculator may crash. For unknown reasons this will fix [a major] problem. Worse yet, not just TI-Chess is caught by that new AMS/TI mystery, but all larger games! I think on the weekend I will release a new version of TI-Chess which just prevents the user from starting the program if it is not archived. As you can see this is not really a bugfix, but a workaround. It's not a TI-Chess native problem.
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The comments below are written by ticalc.org visitors. Their views are not necessarily those of ticalc.org, and ticalc.org takes no responsibility for their content.
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Is this legal?
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Philip Sugimoto
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Good but I have a question that may put a damper on things.
"Is it legal?"
Did we not all sign a form saying "I Agree ...." of which one condition was not to reverse engineer products....
(Note: In case TI finds and kills save these files to your computer immediately) smile
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17 August 2000, 18:32 GMT
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Is TI controlling what runs on their calcs legal?
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calcfreak901
(Web Page)
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While I cannot guarantee that this is entirely legal here in the US, I have a strong feeling that it is. Regardless of whether or not its technically legal is the bigger issue of whether or not TI has a monopoly over operating systems for their calculators. Wasn't it something like this that got Microsoft into their antitrust case? While the Linux developer community is much larger than the entire TI community, and the fact that most (almost all?) of us are younger than 18, TI's restriction of calculator operating systems to their own is, in my opinion, a violation of antitrust laws, specifically some of the ones that Microsoft violated with cornering the PC OS market with the Windows series.
TI quite possibly has the opinion that they can do whatever they want on this issue because the TI community is all a bunch of kids (I know that there are several members of the TI community that are over 18, but its a very small percentage), and what are we going to do, convince the Department of Justice to prosecute a company? Or would we file a class action lawsuit? Neither of those would likely even be accepted as cases by the US court system. The above were not threats against TI. They were just possible courses of action that could be taken if TI becomes unruly on this.
If this does become a legal matter, particularly if TI takes the programmer(s) to court, be sure to have the source code on T-shirts, on paper, as html, and don't forget to take up speaking C, 68000 assembler, or both, at least until the trial's over. I wonder if having the binaries and/or hexes would help too if they were included with the source in/on those media.
Anyone have some asbestos and liquid helium I can borrow?
e of pi and the unimatrix's 45.59985035114 cents
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18 August 2000, 00:25 GMT
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Re: Cracks and Patches and Fixes, Oh My!
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Stuart Bergstrom
(Web Page)
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I wonder how many people are with me when I say that I feel so out of the loop. I haven't used MaxMem, nor have I played TI-Chess . . . let alone had the honor of having it crash my TI-89! I think I need to make it a point to reassert my standing in this place before schools starts.
Love, Stuart
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17 August 2000, 18:36 GMT
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Re: Re: Cracks and Patches and Fixes, Oh My!
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Sebastian Reichelt
(Web Page)
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One of my friends created a lot of BASIC programs. He never put a single ASM program on his calc. Then, the AMS crashed (I think he had 2.03), and he lost everything.
I did a complete reset before my AP test, and put only math stuff on my TI-89. Still, it crashed during the test (which sucked even more because the calc wouldn't let me archive some stuff, again a bug in the AMS).
You see, no need to feel proud; you probably never turn your calc on. :-)
Then again, you shouldn't say anything against the great work of Julien Muchembled and Thomas Nussbaumer. They rock, as you guys would put it.
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17 August 2000, 20:35 GMT
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