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  3. HP calculator: new toy on the horizon.

HP calculator: new toy on the horizon.

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  • S Offline
    S Offline
    Septimus Hedgehog
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    Mrs. Wife is back home which curtails my recent flurry buying new toys such as mouse/keyboard and laser printer. I just spotted a new toy on the horizon which I want. It's the newish HP Prime Graphing calculator. As an aficionado of HP calculators (I have several) their new one would slot right in. I can't pass this by Princess just yet and neither do I want to be price-gouged by the silly prices you pay for them in the UK compared to the bankrupt/closed for business US. I could go "grey" and buy one from those sometimes questionable trade-price shops in Tottenham Court Road but I doubt their prices will be proportionate. Crimble is just around the corner so I'll think of someway of getting one into my stocking. :)

    If there is one thing more dangerous than getting between a bear and her cubs it's getting between my wife and her chocolate.

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    • S Septimus Hedgehog

      Mrs. Wife is back home which curtails my recent flurry buying new toys such as mouse/keyboard and laser printer. I just spotted a new toy on the horizon which I want. It's the newish HP Prime Graphing calculator. As an aficionado of HP calculators (I have several) their new one would slot right in. I can't pass this by Princess just yet and neither do I want to be price-gouged by the silly prices you pay for them in the UK compared to the bankrupt/closed for business US. I could go "grey" and buy one from those sometimes questionable trade-price shops in Tottenham Court Road but I doubt their prices will be proportionate. Crimble is just around the corner so I'll think of someway of getting one into my stocking. :)

      If there is one thing more dangerous than getting between a bear and her cubs it's getting between my wife and her chocolate.

      M Offline
      M Offline
      Maximilien
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      I used to own a couple of RPN hp calculators in the previous millennium (mostly for the "cool" factor) I don't see the point of HP continuing manufacturing them; phones and tables are a lot more efficient at doing that kind of job. HP should create "apps" for those devices.

      I'd rather be phishing!

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      • M Maximilien

        I used to own a couple of RPN hp calculators in the previous millennium (mostly for the "cool" factor) I don't see the point of HP continuing manufacturing them; phones and tables are a lot more efficient at doing that kind of job. HP should create "apps" for those devices.

        I'd rather be phishing!

        S Offline
        S Offline
        Septimus Hedgehog
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        I cut my HP "teeth" on a 41CX way back when you had a mag stripe card reader and a very rudimentary thermal printer. Programming it meant you had to concern yourself with every register. We turned out crazy stuff on them such as the yields from ore processing. Since then I started a collection of HP calculators. A former boss of mine bought a 41CX on fleabay. A research lab was clearing out some old cupboards and they discovered a stash of them, still boxed and shrink-wrapped. He bought one and when he opened it he said he could still detect that brand new HP calculator scent. I knew exactly what he meant. :)

        If there is one thing more dangerous than getting between a bear and her cubs it's getting between my wife and her chocolate.

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        • S Septimus Hedgehog

          I cut my HP "teeth" on a 41CX way back when you had a mag stripe card reader and a very rudimentary thermal printer. Programming it meant you had to concern yourself with every register. We turned out crazy stuff on them such as the yields from ore processing. Since then I started a collection of HP calculators. A former boss of mine bought a 41CX on fleabay. A research lab was clearing out some old cupboards and they discovered a stash of them, still boxed and shrink-wrapped. He bought one and when he opened it he said he could still detect that brand new HP calculator scent. I knew exactly what he meant. :)

          If there is one thing more dangerous than getting between a bear and her cubs it's getting between my wife and her chocolate.

          R Offline
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          Roger Wright
          wrote on last edited by
          #4

          My first calculator was a HP 67, with the card reader/writer, and it kept me alive in engineering school. There is no justification for continuing to manufacture any form of calculator without RPN, as it is orders of magnitude faster and more efficient than algebraic calculators. I still use nothing else, as it is the only logical method of calculation in the Universe.

          Will Rogers never met me.

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          • R Roger Wright

            My first calculator was a HP 67, with the card reader/writer, and it kept me alive in engineering school. There is no justification for continuing to manufacture any form of calculator without RPN, as it is orders of magnitude faster and more efficient than algebraic calculators. I still use nothing else, as it is the only logical method of calculation in the Universe.

            Will Rogers never met me.

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            Corporal Agarn
            wrote on last edited by
            #5

            I had forgotten about the card reader model. Love and still use my HP-11C. First calculator (for college) cost $60 on half price sale. Battery would last about 15 minutes before needing a recharge. It had one memory and did square roots! Guy at college came to class with a $300 one that did tan/cos/sin.

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            • R Roger Wright

              My first calculator was a HP 67, with the card reader/writer, and it kept me alive in engineering school. There is no justification for continuing to manufacture any form of calculator without RPN, as it is orders of magnitude faster and more efficient than algebraic calculators. I still use nothing else, as it is the only logical method of calculation in the Universe.

              Will Rogers never met me.

              S Offline
              S Offline
              Septimus Hedgehog
              wrote on last edited by
              #6

              I feel the same way about RPN. It just seems so natural and, almost so obviously better. I like the retro look of the HP67's display. :)

              If there is one thing more dangerous than getting between a bear and her cubs it's getting between my wife and her chocolate.

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              • C Corporal Agarn

                I had forgotten about the card reader model. Love and still use my HP-11C. First calculator (for college) cost $60 on half price sale. Battery would last about 15 minutes before needing a recharge. It had one memory and did square roots! Guy at college came to class with a $300 one that did tan/cos/sin.

                R Offline
                R Offline
                Roger Wright
                wrote on last edited by
                #7

                I think I paid $380 for the 67, and I had to drive to Los Angeles to buy it. A friend and I spent a sleepless weekend writing a program for that thing that would solve for the roots of any expression up to 20th order, real or complex. It saved us both the next week in the Control Systems class final exam! :-D

                Will Rogers never met me.

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                • S Septimus Hedgehog

                  I feel the same way about RPN. It just seems so natural and, almost so obviously better. I like the retro look of the HP67's display. :)

                  If there is one thing more dangerous than getting between a bear and her cubs it's getting between my wife and her chocolate.

                  R Offline
                  R Offline
                  Roger Wright
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #8

                  The thought process required to use RPN matches exactly the process used by a real brain in soling a problem. Those who use algebraic entry must have really peculiar minds, and slow ones to boot.

                  Will Rogers never met me.

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                  • R Roger Wright

                    I think I paid $380 for the 67, and I had to drive to Los Angeles to buy it. A friend and I spent a sleepless weekend writing a program for that thing that would solve for the roots of any expression up to 20th order, real or complex. It saved us both the next week in the Control Systems class final exam! :-D

                    Will Rogers never met me.

                    C Offline
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                    Corporal Agarn
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #9

                    The HP-11C was not my first as it was bought for me by the company I worked for (programmable but no hard I/O). That is where someone had a one with a reader, do not remember the number, and would program fatigue analysis.

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                    • M Maximilien

                      I used to own a couple of RPN hp calculators in the previous millennium (mostly for the "cool" factor) I don't see the point of HP continuing manufacturing them; phones and tables are a lot more efficient at doing that kind of job. HP should create "apps" for those devices.

                      I'd rather be phishing!

                      B Offline
                      B Offline
                      brothers
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #10

                      Maximilien wrote:

                      I don't see the point of HP continuing manufacturing them; phones and tables are a lot more efficient at doing that kind of job.
                       
                      HP should create "apps" for those devices.

                      They have. They've written a Saturn emulator for IOS, and produced (IIRC) HP-12C and -15C calculators for iPhone. These calcs use the Saturn code from the actual HP calculators. My personal favorite is a HP-42S emulator developed by a third party.

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