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I've been thinking about getting a new calculator; either a CX or a Prizm. I know each has their advantages and disadvantages. Which one should I get (and why)? Also, money is not a problem. I have enough money to get either one.
Quote from: Spyro543 on March 12, 2012, 04:40:48 pmI've been thinking about getting a new calculator; either a CX or a Prizm. I know each has their advantages and disadvantages. Which one should I get (and why)? Also, money is not a problem. I have enough money to get either one.That's a no brainier. Get the Prizm. Two thing are clear. First, beyond a doubt TI will continue to make life difficult for developers so the programmers will continue to migrate to Casio. Secondly, the TI customer service people (1-800-TI-CARES) really don't care and mostly aren't qualified to offer any assistance any way! Casio represents the future. TI represents the past.
Secondly, the TI customer service people (1-800-TI-CARES) really don't care and mostly aren't qualified to offer any assistance any way! Casio represents the future. TI represents the past.
And in "native" development, Lua is doing a pretty good job. Especially with OS 3.2
Who updates their OS anyway?
QuoteAnd in "native" development, Lua is doing a pretty good job. Especially with OS 3.2That's silly, Adriweb. Lua can in no way be qualified "native", and its performance is easily more than 10 times slower than native code (it's a purely interpreted language).
I think what it boils down to is that if the new TI os cannot be hacked and a new version of Ndless be created for it, anyone that has supported ti by buying their products has no grounds for complaint. You got what you deserve.