TI-CAS

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Site Name

TI-CAS

Site URL

http://www.ti-cas.org

Founders

Olivier Miclo
Jonah Cohen
Clem Vasseur

Founding Date

May 28, 2000

Years Active

2000 to 2008(?)

Aliases

Tagline

Affiliations

Site Genre

Math
Programming

TI-CAS was a site designed for programmers and students, featuring lots of math-related programs and literature.

Site Content

(Taken from TI-Asm about page)

TI-CAS.org's TI-ASM website is designed to be an invaluable resource both for beginning assembly language programmers and for programmers with a great deal of experience. To help you get started, the tools section contains assemblers, editors, and even emulators to cover all aspects of development. There are also many tutorials available to teach you the basics of assembly. More advanced programmers can consult the resources, routines, and articles sections. Finally, if you want to test your skills against the best of the best, you can try out our programming contest.

TI-ASM is composed and maintained by Clement Vasseur and Jonah Cohen. Any questions or comments regarding the contents of TI-ASM should be sent to them, as well as any particular assembly language questions that may not have been addressed on the site. Ideas for future tutorials, contests, resources, etc., are also encouraged.

Site Significance

Site Staff

  • Olivier Miclo
  • Jonah Cohen
  • and Clem Vasseur

Site Milestones

  • List of their important milestones (founding, important programs, etc.)

Site Names

Site URLs

Site Screenshot

site-screenshot.jpg
(Screenshot of Site homepage circa year)

Site History

(Taken from May 2000 ticalc.org news article)

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ti-cas.org Opens
Posted by Nick on 28 May 2000, 06:13 GMT

Olivier Miclo, Jonah Cohen, and Clem Vasseur have collaborated to form a web site called ti-cas.org. This site was designed with both the developer and the student in mind: it offers programs and tutorials for creating intriguing programs for the 68K FLASH-based calculators, along with providing a lot of math-related programs and literature as well. This looks very promising. It's in two different languages (to bridge the infamous gap that's been unceremoniously established), and it's even backed by TI. If you're interested in developing, or you're just a student wanting to explore, pay them a visit!

Miscellaneous