Some Mad Genius Put ChatGPT on a TI-84 Graphing Calculator
On Saturday, a YouTube creator called ChromaLock published a video detailing how he modified a Texas Instruments TI-84 graphing calculator to connect to the internet and access OpenAI's ChatGPT, potentially enabling students to cheat on tests. The video, titled "I Made the Ultimate Cheating Device," demonstrates a custom hardware modification that allows users of the graphing calculator to type in problems sent to ChatGPT using the keypad and receive live responses on the screen. ChromaLock began by exploring the calculator's link port, typically used for transferring educational programs between devices. He then designed a custom circuit board he calls "TI-32" that incorporates a tiny Wi-Fi-enabled microcontroller, the Seed Studio ESP32-C3 (which costs about 5), along with other components to interface with the calculator's systems. This story originally appeared on Ars Technica, a trusted source for technology news, tech policy analysis, reviews, and more.
Sep-21-2024, 21:30:00 GMT
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