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Quote from: DJ_O on November 02, 2012, 05:17:43 pmBack in the days, for example if you bought a Rogers stick, you had to subscribe to some extra internet plan from them to be able to use it, so you ended up with two Internet bills. >.< I'm glad this changed, but I have never really seen those sticks anywhere in retail stores in recent years. Are they only available online?EDIT: Oh I see juju. I thought they were the same, but tied to one company.Yeah, there's still some of those at the Bell store. But yeah, those sticks are pretty useful when you're almost always in a place where there's no wifi. Otherwise there's wifi sticks, they're usually not tied to one ISP in particualar, but some of them might need special drivers.
Back in the days, for example if you bought a Rogers stick, you had to subscribe to some extra internet plan from them to be able to use it, so you ended up with two Internet bills. >.< I'm glad this changed, but I have never really seen those sticks anywhere in retail stores in recent years. Are they only available online?EDIT: Oh I see juju. I thought they were the same, but tied to one company.
So can you access mathworld.alpha during a calculus exam?
Quote from: Rhombicuboctahedron on November 02, 2012, 07:28:52 pmSo can you access mathworld.alpha during a calculus exam? I would hope that before the exam, teachers checked every student calc for potentially suspicious files and launchers then delete anything suspicious or simply disallow that calc althogether and lend the student a school calc in exchange.
"This exactly is the reason why TI is locking down the TI-Nspire"... and failing pretty hard at it, with defective pixie dust, a.k.a badly implemented PTT (like on the TI-Z80 series, anyway)
Yeah true if they saw a dongle or something they would definitively take that away for a while. That or if someone had a Nspire Navigator connected (and managed to hack it).
but you'd have to make drivers for it etc.