Coder Forces Graphing Calculator to Run Doom
They might just want to calculate your hyperbolae, but now graphing calculators will also be forced to play Doom.
A programmer has figured out how to get the original version of Doom running on a graphing calculator. The productivity of the world's students is officially doomed. Yup.
DJOmnimaga demonstrates the game running on a TI-Nspire [http://www.amazon.com/Texas-Instruments-TI-NSpire-Handheld-Calculator/dp/B000QSZD44/ref=sr_1_4?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1298147333&sr=1-4] graphing calculator. This is an actual port of Doom called nDoom, and not a clone.
Unfortunately, it only runs for 20-60 seconds before a problem typically occurs, so the project is still a work in progress. According to DJOmnimaga, sometimes the graphics will get distorted, the screen will turn black, or the game will totally freeze. For a machine designed to calculate y = a sin(bx + c), I'm still impressed.
I feel really bad for math teachers though. Now when they think they're getting through to students that are deeply engrossed in their graphing calculators, they're really just losing them to a life of fragging demons.
Source: Game Informer [http://www.omnimaga.org/index.php?PHPSESSID=0ee7fa8ea9e1dfd4c51bd6641b6923c0&topic=6637.0]
Permalink
They might just want to calculate your hyperbolae, but now graphing calculators will also be forced to play Doom.
A programmer has figured out how to get the original version of Doom running on a graphing calculator. The productivity of the world's students is officially doomed. Yup.
DJOmnimaga demonstrates the game running on a TI-Nspire [http://www.amazon.com/Texas-Instruments-TI-NSpire-Handheld-Calculator/dp/B000QSZD44/ref=sr_1_4?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1298147333&sr=1-4] graphing calculator. This is an actual port of Doom called nDoom, and not a clone.
Unfortunately, it only runs for 20-60 seconds before a problem typically occurs, so the project is still a work in progress. According to DJOmnimaga, sometimes the graphics will get distorted, the screen will turn black, or the game will totally freeze. For a machine designed to calculate y = a sin(bx + c), I'm still impressed.
I feel really bad for math teachers though. Now when they think they're getting through to students that are deeply engrossed in their graphing calculators, they're really just losing them to a life of fragging demons.
Source: Game Informer [http://www.omnimaga.org/index.php?PHPSESSID=0ee7fa8ea9e1dfd4c51bd6641b6923c0&topic=6637.0]
Permalink