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TI Calculators / Re: What is the practical difference between the TI-84 Plus and Silver?
« on: April 30, 2015, 10:23:50 am »
Thanks a lot.
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TI Calculators / Re: What is the practical difference between the TI-84 Plus and Silver?« on: April 30, 2015, 10:23:50 am »
Thanks a lot.
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TI Calculators / Re: What is the practical difference between the TI-84 Plus and Silver?« on: April 30, 2015, 10:16:11 am »
Oh, thanks. 500K sounds like a fair ton of memory though. Is there a Linux app to transfer files to and fro?
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TI Calculators / Re: What is the practical difference between the TI-84 Plus and Silver?« on: April 30, 2015, 10:00:05 am »
Thanks I have no idea what that means in practical terms. Would you explain please?
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TI Calculators / What is the practical difference between the TI-84 Plus and Silver?« on: April 30, 2015, 09:50:35 am »
Hi,
I'm not understanding what the real difference between these units is. ticalc.org says that although the Silver has more RAM, only 24K of RAM is user-accessible. Is this true even when programming in Z80 assembly? The Silver is much more expensive. What do I lose by buying a regular 84+ and not getting the Silver model? Thanks. 5
HP Calculators / Re: HP50G advanced applications for mathematics« on: March 24, 2014, 06:58:03 am »Looks nice. I wonder if those are coded in ARM assembly/C? I am curious if the HP 50g even has native ASM support or if it's just BASIC? Responding to an old post but just for the record... HP 50g does not have BASIC at all, although it is widely misstated on the net that it does. The HP 50g is a descendant of the HP 48 Series. The 50g is based on the dedicated Saturn microprocessor from the 48 series but emulated on ARM. The languages on the HP 50g are User RPL, System RPL, Saturn Assembly, and ARM assembly. ARM assembly is supported onboard (natively). I think Saturn assembly is also supported onboard but I don't remember.
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