last data update: 2011/10/15, 11:35

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during the test: 0.45 s

cable connection (average): 0.53 s

DSL connection (average): 0.61 s

modem (average): 4.92 s

HTTP headers

Information about DNS servers

cemetech.netA66.7.209.205IN14400
cemetech.netSOAns1189.dizinc.comroot.sh128.surpasshosting.com201109280086400 7200 3600000 86400 IN 43200
cemetech.netMX0cemetech.netIN14400
cemetech.netNSns1189.dizinc.comIN43200
cemetech.netNSns1190.dizinc.comIN43200

Received from the first DNS server

Request to the server "cemetech.net"
You used the following DNS server:
DNS Name: ns1189.dizinc.com
DNS Server Address: 66.7.209.206#53
DNS server aliases:

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REQUEST SECTION:
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ANSWER SECTION:
cemetech.net. 14400 IN MX 0 cemetech.net.
cemetech.net. 86400 IN SOA ns1189.dizinc.com. root.sh128.surpasshosting.com. 2011092800 86400 7200 3600000 86400
cemetech.net. 86400 IN NS ns1189.dizinc.com.
cemetech.net. 86400 IN NS ns1190.dizinc.com.
cemetech.net. 14400 IN A 66.7.209.205

SECTION NOTES:
cemetech.net. 14400 IN A 66.7.209.205

Received 192 bytes from address 66.7.209.206#53 in 51 ms

Received from the second DNS server

Request to the server "cemetech.net"
You used the following DNS server:
DNS Name: ns1190.dizinc.com
DNS Server Address: 66.7.209.207#53
DNS server aliases:

HEADER opcode: REQUEST, status: NOERROR, id: 55091
flag: qr aa rd REQUEST: 1, ANSWER: 5, AUTHORITY: 0, ADDITIONAL: 1

REQUEST SECTION:
cemetech.net. IN ANY

ANSWER SECTION:
cemetech.net. 14400 IN MX 0 cemetech.net.
cemetech.net. 86400 IN SOA ns1189.dizinc.com. root.sh128.surpasshosting.com. 2011092800 86400 7200 3600000 86400
cemetech.net. 86400 IN NS ns1190.dizinc.com.
cemetech.net. 86400 IN NS ns1189.dizinc.com.
cemetech.net. 14400 IN A 66.7.209.205

SECTION NOTES:
cemetech.net. 14400 IN A 66.7.209.205

Received 192 bytes from address 66.7.209.207#53 in 52 ms

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Location

IP: 66.7.209.205

continent: NA, country: United States (USA), city: Orlando

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Basic information

website build using CSS

code weight: 31.29 KB

text per all code ratio: 45 %

title: Cemetech | Home

description: Cemetech is a development site and community forum for TI-83+, TI-84+, and Nspire TI graphing calculator programming, web programming, and hardware modifications.

keywords: Cemetech, Cemetech.net, Kerm Martian, KermMartian, Doors CS, TI-83+, TI-84+, programming, graphing, calculator, BASIC, ASM

encoding: iso-8859-1

language: en

Website code analysis

one word phrases repeated minimum three times

two word phrases repeated minimum three times

three word phrases repeated minimum three times

B tags

The Five Pack Of Math

TI-BASIC Programs

Last week marked the 52nd episode of Have Calc, Will Program, the calculator community's weekly opportunity to teleconference, chat about programming and life, and share its latest projects and frustrations. Raylin and I founded Have Calc, Will Program (HCWP) as a well-organized evening of discussion, in which a moderator would guide a discussion of items of interest, such as a specific programming or a hardware tip, then open up the floor to serialized project updates and general discussion. It evolved over its first few weeks into a more informal format, with a less strict beginning time, looser organization, and an ending time that often stretches far into the morning as the more dedicated members among us keep working on difficult problems or just continue hanging out and chatting. The session continues to focus on calculators, and is generally driven by Cemetech's long-time gurus, but often covers various related aspects of technology and life as well. You can join us at 8pm EST every Wednesday night on TinyChat. Here's to many more years of HCWP! Permalink Latest Cemetech Prizm Projects, SourceCoder Prizm Support Published by KermMartian on October 8, 2011 at 12:40:57 AM CST | Discuss this article (5) Although the first month of the fall semester has taken a big chunk out of most of our members' traditionally calculator-devoted blocks of free time, several notable projects continue or have started. Our illustrious TIFreak8x has jumped into Prizm coding, releasing Key2Text and Sample Scrolling Menu, two great reference programs for those of you looking to get started with Casio BASIC for the Prizm calculator. TIFreak8x is also starting a port of his Age of Darkness game from the TI calculators to the Prizm; please stop by the thread and encourage him! New user Sarah has jumped right into Prizm BASIC, with projects including the descriptively-titled Simple RPG (though she is open to title suggestions), and a medley of minigames for the Prizm. Dependable Cemetech administrator Merthsoft, as an interim project while he moves to a new state and a new job, has been working on a Periodic Table of the Elements program for the Prizm. In an unusually thorough move, he first prototyped the program's data lookup and retrieval mechanism in C# as a computer application before porting it to C for the Prizm. We wish these and all our authors the best of luck on their projects. Near the end of the summer, I also added extensive support to Cemetech's well-known SourceCoder 2.5 online IDE for editing TI-BASIC programs. It can now tokenize, detokenize, store, and edit Casio BASIC programs for the Prizm. It also has a complete Prizm editor interface with roughly half of the Prizm's token entry menus already implemented. With Sarah's help, support is also available to tokenize the modified .txt files that the Prizm generates as backups of programs. These additions supplement SourceCoder's pre-existing support for turning color images at sizes up to 384x216 (the size of the Prizm's LCD) into a hex format suitable for use in Prizm C programs. Any bug reports or stories of success from using SourceCoder's Prizm features would be greatly appreciated. Finally, although it has come to our attention that a new OS update for the Prizm is available. Although it fixes some bugs and adds support for the new .g3e file format, preliminary reports indicate that it has a few new bugs, so we are tentatively not recommending that you install the update. If we receive further reports indicating it is worthwhile, or that a new version is released, we'll be sure to let you all know. Drop us a line if you learn anything new! Permalink Back To School 2011: Cemetech's Calculator Guide Published by KermMartian on September 9, 2011 at 1:42:07 AM CST | Discuss this article (75) So you're back in school.

Buying a Calculator

If you already have a calculator, then you don't need to read this section, unless you're interested in expanding your collection or are doubting your choice. If you happen to have a recommendation or requirement from a teacher or professor, that narrows things down significantly. Our personal recommendations: High school students (and below):

College students:

Read the rest of this article to learn more about calculator choices, programming tools, and where to download the best shells, programs, and games for your calculator!

Permalink [Prizm] Obliterate 1.0 Published by KermMartian on September 7, 2011 at 8:21:48 PM CST | Discuss this article (39) Obliterate, is a scorched-earth / tanks game for the Casio Prizm color graphing calculator. Play against up to six AIs in a battle for supremacy. Set your angle and power, then fire away, but watch out for the wind! Enjoy the classic TI Obliterate game on the Prizm's full-color, high-resolution screen. It includes full working AI, intelligent terrain generation, and all the features from Obliterate for the TI-83+ through TI-84+SE calculators except multi-calculator networking. Feel free to post any comments, compliments, and criticisms in the attached topic. Screenshots and video below. Download

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Buying a Calculator

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Permalink Latest Cemetech Prizm Projects, SourceCoder Prizm Support Published by KermMartian on October 8, 2011 at 12:40:57 AM CST | Discuss this article (5) Although the first month of the fall semester has taken a big chunk out of most of our members' traditionally calculator-devoted blocks of free time, several notable projects continue or have started. Our illustrious TIFreak8x has jumped into Prizm coding, releasing Key2Text and Sample Scrolling Menu, two great reference programs for those of you looking to get started with Casio BASIC for the Prizm calculator. TIFreak8x is also starting a port of his Age of Darkness game from the TI calculators to the Prizm; please stop by the thread and encourage him! New user Sarah has jumped right into Prizm BASIC, with projects including the descriptively-titled Simple RPG (though she is open to title suggestions), and a medley of minigames for the Prizm. Dependable Cemetech administrator Merthsoft, as an interim project while he moves to a new state and a new job, has been working on a Periodic Table of the Elements program for the Prizm. In an unusually thorough move, he first prototyped the program's data lookup and retrieval mechanism in C# as a computer application before porting it to C for the Prizm. We wish these and all our authors the best of luck on their projects. Near the end of the summer, I also added extensive support to Cemetech's well-known SourceCoder 2.5 online IDE for editing TI-BASIC programs. It can now tokenize, detokenize, store, and edit Casio BASIC programs for the Prizm. It also has a complete Prizm editor interface with roughly half of the Prizm's token entry menus already implemented. With Sarah's help, support is also available to tokenize the modified .txt files that the Prizm generates as backups of programs. These additions supplement SourceCoder's pre-existing support for turning color images at sizes up to 384x216 (the size of the Prizm's LCD) into a hex format suitable for use in Prizm C programs. Any bug reports or stories of success from using SourceCoder's Prizm features would be greatly appreciated. Finally, although it has come to our attention that a new OS update for the Prizm is available. Although it fixes some bugs and adds support for the new .g3e file format, preliminary reports indicate that it has a few new bugs, so we are tentatively not recommending that you install the update. If we receive further reports indicating it is worthwhile, or that a new version is released, we'll be sure to let you all know. Drop us a line if you learn anything new! Permalink Back To School 2011: Cemetech's Calculator Guide Published by KermMartian on September 9, 2011 at 1:42:07 AM CST | Discuss this article (75) So you're back in school. Suddenly you're stuck at a desk for eight hours a day, five days a week, and life looks bleak. Luckily for you, you have your trusty TI or Casio graphing calculator by your side, perhaps a TI-83+ or a TI-84+ Silver Edition, a Casio Prizm, or (heaven forbid) a TI-Nspire. Now you want some math programs and some games for your calculator to keep yourself educated and entertained. You've come to the right place! Or perhaps you are looking to buy a graphing calculator for yourself, or for your son or daughter for school. You, too, are in the right place at the right time. Without further ado, please enjoy Cemetech's brief guide to getting started with your new or love-worn graphing calculator! Buying a Calculator If you already have a calculator, then you don't need to read this section, unless you're interested in expanding your collection or are doubting your choice. If you happen to have a recommendation or requirement from a teacher or professor, that narrows things down significantly. Our personal recommendations: High school students (and below): Your best choice is a TI-84+ Silver Edition graphing calculator. It's powerful, has tens of thousands of math programs and games available, lasts for months on a set of batteries, and is attractive to boot. Even better, you can put Doors CS on it (more on that later). If you're the sort that cares, the TI-84+SE is accepted on standardized tests like the ACT and the SAT. Your second-best choice is only second-best because your average teacher is likely to be less familiar with it: the Casio Prizm. For the same price (or cheaper!) than a TI-84+SE, you can get a huge, bright, full-color LCD, an extremely fast processor, ten times the memory, and for you programmers, easy coding in BASIC and C. Like the TI-84+/SE, it can do algebra, simple numeric calculus, graphing, statistics, and is accepted on standardized tests. College students: Are you doing engineering? If so, a TI-89 might be appropriate, as it has much more powerful symbolic features than the TI-83+/84+ series of calculators, extensive calculus capabilities, built-in 3D graphing, and much more. In addition, if you enjoy programming, you can write C programs for the TI-89. However, if you're not doing engineering or math, and you're not an experienced, hardcore programmer, then you're probably better off with a TI-84+ Silver Edition or a Casio Prizm (see above). Read the rest of this article to learn more about calculator choices, programming tools, and where to download the best shells, programs, and games for your calculator!

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CEMETECH
Leading The Way To The Future
Home
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Home
Archives
Projects
Forum
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About
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Have Calc, Will Program: One Year Later
Latest Cemetech Prizm Projects, SourceCoder Prizm Support
Back To School 2011: Cemetech's Calculator Guide
[Prizm] Obliterate 1.0
[RSS]
[RSS]
Christopher Mitchell
News Archives
file archives
show the new files
More Information
MATHPACK.zip
More Information
TI_BASIC_Programs.zip
Help, new to programming.
allynfolksjr
Doors CS 7 Bug Reports
arriopolis
The Blue Platform
_player1537
Quick Question on DCSlib GUI Mouse.
KermMartian
Clove 3
Prototype Progress Log
Resurrected: PartyMode 2.0
Summer 2011 Project Brainstorming
E-Paper Display Project
Simms
Simms0
Simms1
Simms2
Simms3
Simms4
Simms5
Sfth
gCn_Metahub
Discuss this article
Raylin
founded Have Calc, Will Program (HCWP)
Permalink
Discuss this article
TIFreak8x
Key2Text
Sample Scrolling Menu
Age of Darkness
Sarah
Simple RPG
open to title suggestions
minigames for the Prizm
Merthsoft
Periodic Table of the Elements
SourceCoder 2.5
new OS update for the Prizm
Permalink
Discuss this article
Doors CS
Read the rest of this article
Permalink
Discuss this article
Obliterate for the TI-83+ through TI-84+SE
[Prizm] Obliterate 1.0

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Video of [Prizm] Obliterate 1.0 Beta 1