Mineso

Mineso is a turing-complete I can convert some BF to Mineso, but I don't know enough BF to convert anything] programming language made by DeadlyFugu. It uses tape memory, which starts at position 0 and, if on a Turing machine, could go on for infinity. However, it'd be impracticle since Mineso uses unary, with the only number it has being '1'. Every operation in Mineso requires a number after it, having no 1's after it would be treated as a zero.

Language overview
Like BF, Mineso uses an array of memory cells, with a each set to zero by default and a pointer. You are expected to set the pointer on program start, so what the pointer is by default is up to the implementation.

Certain memory cells don't act as you would expect in BF. Cells 0,1,2,3,4,6,9,10,11 will all do something other then just store a value.

Assuming n is the value you are sending to the cell, The advantages of working this way is that one can easily add in a new mathematical operation or something, without the need to add in more commands. It also allows implementations to add in support for all sorts of crazy I/O, library access and whatnot, without the need to fork the language and add in new commands.

The value in the active cell can be modified and moved around using commands. Every command requires a unary number after it (With no 1's after it meaning a 0).

Assuming n is the tailing number: Any symbols that are not in the above list or a 1 are ignored (So '<C a,1R' is equivalent to '<1').

Hello, World!
This should print 'Hello World!' to the screen (Without a newline)

To the power of
Replace A with a unary number, and B with a unary number. It then prints A to the power of B.

Counts down
']' is very useful for loops, this is a good example.

Implementations
Mineso interpreter by DeadlyFugu. The interpreter uses 8-bit cells with 256 cells in total. One could easily rewrite the source code (It's GPL'd) to have bigger/more cells. Also, the Window's .exe's are outdated, and the debug info probably doesn't make any sense to anyone other then him. Then again, it is an esoteric programming language, no?