Hello all!
It's been a long time since I've been here (my previous username was techboy6601). In that time, I've started high school, bought an actually decent computer, and released a jailbreak tweak called Bloard that has garnered over 250,000 downloads. Anyways, I'm glad to be back.
My new idea for a project would be a TI-83/84+ bridge for the Raspberry Pi. The two would communicate over direct USB using DCS 7.2 and Calcnet.
The idea would be that the calculator could act as a keyboard/monitor for the Pi, displaying information and sending commands to it.
I think my biggest obstacle would be installing Linux drivers and making a tool that uses the Calcnet protocol.
The end goal would be to have a console tool that can create a local port on the Pi that would allow sending and receiving packets from the calculator. This would in turn allow other people to make their own tools that can perform operations on the Pi and show their results on the calculator.
My question is, does any tool like that exist already? Also, is there any guide already on how to install TI-83/84+ drivers on a Linux distribution such as Raspbian?
Thanks!
It's been a long time since I've been here (my previous username was techboy6601). In that time, I've started high school, bought an actually decent computer, and released a jailbreak tweak called Bloard that has garnered over 250,000 downloads. Anyways, I'm glad to be back.
My new idea for a project would be a TI-83/84+ bridge for the Raspberry Pi. The two would communicate over direct USB using DCS 7.2 and Calcnet.
The idea would be that the calculator could act as a keyboard/monitor for the Pi, displaying information and sending commands to it.
I think my biggest obstacle would be installing Linux drivers and making a tool that uses the Calcnet protocol.
The end goal would be to have a console tool that can create a local port on the Pi that would allow sending and receiving packets from the calculator. This would in turn allow other people to make their own tools that can perform operations on the Pi and show their results on the calculator.
My question is, does any tool like that exist already? Also, is there any guide already on how to install TI-83/84+ drivers on a Linux distribution such as Raspbian?
Thanks!