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It looks like that the companies making graphic calculators are inspired by the smartphone industry.I'm the only one in my school owning an Nspire CX and a bunch of people asked me if it has internet and if i can call with it.sadly they stop making it like a smartphone when they reach the processor and memory part.
Just ask them why they bought a smartphone if all the games they play run on calculators (Doodle Jump, CubeRunner, Fruit Ninja, etc). I don't know a lot of people really using their smartphones at its real potential (like playing resource demanding 3D games such as RavenSword or something) so really, if they use it like a calc, what is the difference between the calc and the smartphone ?
Quote from: Hayleia on April 19, 2013, 06:45:33 amJust ask them why they bought a smartphone if all the games they play run on calculators (Doodle Jump, CubeRunner, Fruit Ninja, etc). I don't know a lot of people really using their smartphones at its real potential (like playing resource demanding 3D games such as RavenSword or something) so really, if they use it like a calc, what is the difference between the calc and the smartphone ?Can your calc take pictures, make phone calls, send text messages, surf the internet (maybe?), have speakers for sound/music and a touch screen, etc.? Also, some smart phones might even be cheaper than an NSpire.I agree, the design does look nice, but i don't know how i feel about the control pad.