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Like the others, I'd say Clickpad non-CAS, since you explicitly wrote that you're into gaming but not into math.With the Clickpad non-CAS, you get the 84+ keypad as a bonus, which, besides the 84+ mode, could prove useful with, say, a 89(T) emulator (89/89T and most of the recent TI-Z80 family models have the same layout).
Quote from: Lionel Debroux on August 03, 2010, 01:09:37 pmLike the others, I'd say Clickpad non-CAS, since you explicitly wrote that you're into gaming but not into math.With the Clickpad non-CAS, you get the 84+ keypad as a bonus, which, besides the 84+ mode, could prove useful with, say, a 89(T) emulator (89/89T and most of the recent TI-Z80 family models have the same layout).The Ti-89 is difficult to type on, as well. You can't use the 84+ keypad to type letters perfectly on a Ti-89 emulator, because all the letters are mixed up--and X, Y and Z all have their own keys rather than requiring ALPHA.If you're talking about the general pattern of keys, that is true, though the 89 keyboard has different labels on keys.