Author: Compynerd255
Posted: 27 Nov 2012 09:32:37 am (GMT -5)
Yes, that is true. Shundra, WabbitEmu is just like a real calculator, so you can send anything you want to it, including a shell like MOS or DCS. If you couldn't do that, you wouldn't be able to send your program either - WabbitEmu would be useless. However, unless you use the "save state" function that chickendude mentioned, anything you install to the calculator won't be there when you quit out.
BTW, the reason you're seeing MirageOS on your TI 84 Plus and not on your TI 83 Plus is because anything in your archive is included in a ROM dump, including any apps you have installed - and when you dumped your ROMs, your 83 Plus was clean while your 84 Plus had MOS on it.
_________________
Visit Betafreak Games: http://www.betafreak.com
Help Me Pay for College:
- Sign up for Fastweb through my referal link!
Posted: 27 Nov 2012 09:32:37 am (GMT -5)
chickendude wrote: |
1) Like willrandship said, you can simply send the shell to the emulator. WabbitEmu probably has a "save state" sort of feature that will load a savestate whenever you run it, that way you don't have to send the shell every time you want to test. |
Yes, that is true. Shundra, WabbitEmu is just like a real calculator, so you can send anything you want to it, including a shell like MOS or DCS. If you couldn't do that, you wouldn't be able to send your program either - WabbitEmu would be useless. However, unless you use the "save state" function that chickendude mentioned, anything you install to the calculator won't be there when you quit out.
BTW, the reason you're seeing MirageOS on your TI 84 Plus and not on your TI 83 Plus is because anything in your archive is included in a ROM dump, including any apps you have installed - and when you dumped your ROMs, your 83 Plus was clean while your 84 Plus had MOS on it.
_________________
Visit Betafreak Games: http://www.betafreak.com
Help Me Pay for College:
- Sign up for Fastweb through my referal link!