Texas Instruments released a new version of it's Advanced Mathematics Software sometime
over the Summer of 1999. This software was created to fix some bugs in the original AMS
software, and because a new hardware version of the TI-89 was created which the original
software was incompatible with. If you have AMS 1.05, you need to use THESE binaries, not
the ones in the main directory, or the ones in the AMS 2.03 directory.

Texas Instruments was also developing a completely revised version of the AMS software
that would have many advantages, notably better archive memory management and support for
multiple Flash applications. Two known versions of this software have come into the hands
of end users: AMS 2.01 and AMS 2.03. If you have AMS 2.01, you can try the binaries in the
AMS 2.03 directory, but they may or may not work because I haven't tested the program with
AMS 2.01. If you have AMS 2.03, then you can use the binaries in the AMS 2.03 directory
because they HAVE been tested to work with the AMS 2.0x Kernel version 0.6.

If you have a TI-92+ with AMS 1.01, you can use the binaries in the main directory.

To check what AMS version you have, press HOME F5 DIAMOND APPS. If it says
Version 1.00 on the screen, then you have AMS 1.00 and need to use the nibbles binary from
the main directory. If it says Version 1.05, then you need to use the binaries from the
AMS 1.05 directory. If it says "Flash Applications" or brings up a menu with programs,
then you have AMS 2.0x, and you need to use the binaries in the AMS 2.03 directory. Note
that the AMS 2.03 binaries have ONLY been tested with AMS 2.03, NOT with AMS 2.01, and not
with any versions of AMS later than 2.03 should you have one.