Der Rechner by NPLI
[nfo]
|
||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
||||||||||||||
|
popularity : 56% |
|||||||||||||
alltime top: #13043 |
|
|||||||||||||
added on the 2013-08-04 22:04:22 by akole |
popularity helper
comments
rulez added on the 2013-08-04 22:21:33 by moqui
Mighty good
quite dull. i liked the scene in the screenshot tho!
The "music" sounded like continuous farting. It distracted me from appreciating the visuals. The wireframe models were hard to see. Perhaps double thick lines? Pig until the music gets removed or fixed.
awful presentation of little new or interesting
i liked it on the stream (=
twisters!
That was actually more demo like than first two prods.
:|
Amusing to see TI-68k demos in this day and age :)
Motivational thumb for the effort. You should keep making more demos for that platform ;)
Several ideas for improvement of this particular demo:
* either saving the contents of the screen at the beginning of the program and restoring them at the end (< 50 bytes, see the startup code of the GCC4TI library), or redrawing them entirely through the Home Screen Restore method (by Greg Dietsche, less than 120 bytes) - failure to do either is considered user-unfriendly ;)
* alleviating the difficulty of seeing wireframe models, mentioned by Luis above, by temporarily changing the contrast;
* using a less repetitive music with more chans ?
* using double-buffering and synchronization with the LCD refresh, in case you haven't already ? There's no obvious tearing in the video, but in TIEmu, most programs don't flicker the way this one does in some parts. TIEmu's grayscale emulation is known to be both complicated and imperfect, but still.
Motivational thumb for the effort. You should keep making more demos for that platform ;)
Several ideas for improvement of this particular demo:
* either saving the contents of the screen at the beginning of the program and restoring them at the end (< 50 bytes, see the startup code of the GCC4TI library), or redrawing them entirely through the Home Screen Restore method (by Greg Dietsche, less than 120 bytes) - failure to do either is considered user-unfriendly ;)
* alleviating the difficulty of seeing wireframe models, mentioned by Luis above, by temporarily changing the contrast;
* using a less repetitive music with more chans ?
* using double-buffering and synchronization with the LCD refresh, in case you haven't already ? There's no obvious tearing in the video, but in TIEmu, most programs don't flicker the way this one does in some parts. TIEmu's grayscale emulation is known to be both complicated and imperfect, but still.
For the platform.
I know the screen can be (mostly) restored by using F5 and e.g. MODE - but still :)
For the next demo (or a final version of this one):
* the GCC4TI SAVE_SCREEN support occurs on the ~15 KB stack, ~13 KB of which are usable in user programs;
* even if you had to save the screen in the heap, this program does not come close to exhausting all available RAM;
* when both stack and heap are really tight, saving/restoring is moot with the small HSR code I mentioned earlier.
TIEmu does emulate sound if you activate the appropriate mode, it defaults to listening for files as it's clearly a more common use case than emulating sound. But as you mentioned (I had seen the note in the nfo), grayscale looks ugly in TIEmu. Grayscale looks better in the old VTI, but that has no kind of accurate sound emulation.
Besides watching the video, I could run the code on my real TI-68k calculators, I have enough of those ^^
Finally, I don't recognize your nickname... do you attend the open development community's message boards (Omnimaga, Cemetech, TI-Planet) ? If you don't, you should :)
For the next demo (or a final version of this one):
* the GCC4TI SAVE_SCREEN support occurs on the ~15 KB stack, ~13 KB of which are usable in user programs;
* even if you had to save the screen in the heap, this program does not come close to exhausting all available RAM;
* when both stack and heap are really tight, saving/restoring is moot with the small HSR code I mentioned earlier.
TIEmu does emulate sound if you activate the appropriate mode, it defaults to listening for files as it's clearly a more common use case than emulating sound. But as you mentioned (I had seen the note in the nfo), grayscale looks ugly in TIEmu. Grayscale looks better in the old VTI, but that has no kind of accurate sound emulation.
Besides watching the video, I could run the code on my real TI-68k calculators, I have enough of those ^^
Finally, I don't recognize your nickname... do you attend the open development community's message boards (Omnimaga, Cemetech, TI-Planet) ? If you don't, you should :)
this should be generations ahead of the z80 based TI-Demos but somehow I feel like it isnt.
Anyway, I enjoyed it so have your thumb :)
Anyway, I enjoyed it so have your thumb :)
I don't really care about the home screen and stuff, it's a demo and not a business application, but even if the effects are kind of solid and so on, I'd really want to see something that I haven't seen literally a thousand times before.
what debrouxl said!
Like it !
There aren't that many demos for the Titanium, and this is the calculator I happen to use, so thumbs up are in order! I'd give you one extra thumb for the sound, but I only have one thumb to give.
good effects but HORRIBLE music. result : piggy.
for the plattform
yes
submit changes
if this prod is a fake, some info is false or the download link is broken,
do not post about it in the comments, it will get lost.
instead, click here !