My compy would have been over $2000 if I bought it from Dell, however, because I bought the parts seperately and plugged it together myself(not that hard btw) it only cost $1200. Just to emphasize how much cheaper building it yourself can be anyways. Of course, if all you want is something to program on, then you can get one of those really cheap internet computers with evil celeron processors. As long as you never try to run anything on it more complicated than MS Word it should work fine. Also, one thing about on-calc asm programming, is I would be constantly terrified of it crashing my calc. No VTI on the real calculator.
Or more likely that Scott is just messing around with everyone and I personally don't believe anything Michael said.
Why in the world would scott actually annouce his takeing over of titan ASM on apirl fools? Better question, why would he even pick the project up when he is busy with college and life?
Face it, it was a joke, and he's laughing his ass off at everyone that puts there email down on the DS board.
I dont really see why people want to have titan asm save and run prgm's. I would rather make something in which i could save stuff then later transfer it onto my comp and then maybe compile it and test. I could add more features into the app like popup 89 style menus and other great stuff. This way i could program while i m on vacation and saves me the trouble in making an app that completely compiles and runs prgm's
Currently working on ColdFusion
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