


The "operating system" on the calculator. The TI-84 Plus calculator has the advantage of allowing the user to upgrade TI should just write an OS which is much harder to cheat using.TI-84 Operating Systems TI-84 Operating Systems That is, until you objected and stood your ground. They just labeled a TI Nspire CX (non-cas) as illegal out of their own laziness. My teachers had an assembly line for about 250 students to check the calcs only for the model number. Pīesides, most teachers in my experience don't go to that much trouble to check for stuff. So they pretty much did nothing that mattered, anyway. My friends didn't install zStart to mod their OSs because they were too scared about bricking it when I told them what boot-code and certificates were. It's mostly hooks, aside from the major boot mod that it can optionally perform. zStart is the holy grail of applications in my opinion, becuase I don't have to run Omnicalc again everytime I get a RAM clear on an unstable OS with low battery. Lots of my friends have made le swtich to CSE, but most people still use the monochrome beasties. The only patch that could maybe be used for cheating would be an app similar to Omnicalc + Symbolic, but it's not even a patch as it is: It just adds some hooks, which just/must reside only in memory. Just things that make it easier to write the unwashed masses more games. I've NEVER used an OS patch for cheating (but I have used other methods ) Most of the patches that exist for other calcs are just for convenience and for ease of use by programmers. Apparently they just have an error code for color-blind people who go wayyy over the top to cheat on tests.Īs our lolwut Art_of_camelot friend pointed out, people don't usually use patches anyway. I was really hoping these "new routines" might speed some stuff up on this slow OS.

Well that's basically like saying "Man I wish it were easier to get crakin' on that Ndless 3.6."
