0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Quote from: chickendude on June 17, 2012, 03:41:58 pmThe main thing keeping me from getting any of their newer calculators is the "lack" of native assembly support. To be honest, having a color screen to play with sounds like a lot of fun, but being locked out of assembly (and, by extension, C), just sucks. I think that was always one of the biggest attractions of their calculators: browsing the massive amounts of programs available and then learning to program them and do things you thought you never'd be able to do. That and knowing that a large number of people would have immediate access to and actually use/enjoy your programs. I guess for ARM programming there are a lot of other communities/platforms out there, i guess you'd just reach a different audience.The 82-83+ (even the 89) will always be special to me, but not because of the math problems i solved on them Programming them was the reason i bought my first (and second, and third, and fourth, etc.) calculator Actually the Casio PRIZM, which has a color screen, a bit more RAM and archive, has ASM support. It isn't intentional by Casio, but they have said if we play nice they'll let us use it.
The main thing keeping me from getting any of their newer calculators is the "lack" of native assembly support. To be honest, having a color screen to play with sounds like a lot of fun, but being locked out of assembly (and, by extension, C), just sucks. I think that was always one of the biggest attractions of their calculators: browsing the massive amounts of programs available and then learning to program them and do things you thought you never'd be able to do. That and knowing that a large number of people would have immediate access to and actually use/enjoy your programs. I guess for ARM programming there are a lot of other communities/platforms out there, i guess you'd just reach a different audience.The 82-83+ (even the 89) will always be special to me, but not because of the math problems i solved on them Programming them was the reason i bought my first (and second, and third, and fourth, etc.) calculator
dang, are they like some sort of group or something?
So that means that casio doesn't support the community, but it also doesn't lock down everything? Yes I'm gonna buy a casio calc, sir.
I think your post is a good example of why TI is pretending to warm up to the community. People are learning that there is an excellent alternative to dealing with ti's "we don't need you additude." It's Casio calc's. My impression of TI's tactics are that they believe the only customers that they need to please are the teachers and the teachers will then require the students to use their nspires.Quote from: Keoni29 on June 18, 2012, 05:26:01 amSo that means that casio doesn't support the community, but it also doesn't lock down everything? Yes I'm gonna buy a casio calc, sir.
Casio said that if we do something wrong again, they might lock the PRIZM like TI did with the Nspire. At least, though, Casio is giving us one last chance.
Ah, if only that were true. Then the TI cas would have competitive math capabilities. For example, i have a ten year old Hp calc that I use for Laplace capability because TI won't put that capability on their calc's. Also, there are a lot of customers that would like to use nspire technology on their iPad but TI ignores these customers and doesn't support that platform.
Quote from: DJ_O on June 19, 2012, 12:41:19 amCasio said that if we do something wrong again, they might lock the PRIZM like TI did with the Nspire. At least, though, Casio is giving us one last chance.what has been done wrong before with casio calcs?
However, about the iPad thing, how could you possibly know what they are doing right now ? I'm not aware (I haven't looked) that Casio did any Prizm app for the iPad neither ? And from what I've seen on the App Store right now, there isn't much CAS software that support as much as the Nspire Computer software can. So whenever TI releases some iOS app (I'm personnaly pretty sure they will since it's the obvious evolution on the education side (see news about US schools getting iPads))