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Messages - Tresio
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« on: October 11, 2010, 06:17:15 pm »
The TI-Nspire used to be 10x worse than it used to be, though.
Why do I feel like I've entered a temporal loop? (Hey, look, I think I just saw yesterday's today version of myself...)
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« on: October 11, 2010, 06:09:52 pm »
A final note, the North American Prizm (fx-CG10) seems to be a bit crippled than the other Prizm (fx-CG20). From what it sounds like, images and movies (in CASIO's g3p format) created on a fx-CG20 cannot be opened on a fx-CG10, unless it was provided by Casio (On Casio's site you can download images/movies from their gallery: http://edu.casio.com/products/cg_series/materials.html) The fx-CG20 can open images and movies from both the fx-CG20 and fx-CG10. This was probably done so it would conform to testing standards in the US.
Exactly. The images and flipbook-like image collections are of proprietary file types. This pleases testing agencies and school administrations.
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« on: October 11, 2010, 06:00:37 pm »
I personally believe that it will have some sort of BASIC language for it, considering that the lower right hand button has "EXE" on it, if not at least assembler support. *tloz pictures Project M in color*
EXE is Casio's standard key for execution of commands - similar to "Enter" or "=" on other calculators. It has nothing specifically to do with programming per se.
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« on: October 11, 2010, 05:57:25 pm »
61Kb of RAM really? It is going to need 162Kb if video RAM just to display a full screen picture.
Well, apparently not, because it has 30+ pre-loaded images and flipbook-like image-sequences. Part of the beauty of a high-res screen is the ability to superimpose mathematics directly on top of image files.
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« on: October 11, 2010, 05:53:28 pm »
Nah TI is not discontinuing the whole line. If you read in the latest pages of the 84+ topic, you'll see that it is only in Germany and Swiss, as well as a few other european countries. However, if TI decides to change their mind and discontinue it everywhere in a near future, they're pretty much screwed.
It's only a matter of time. That's the beginning of the end for the 84. Same process happened with the 85 and 86, despite major protestations and signed petitions by teachers.
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« on: October 11, 2010, 05:37:14 pm »
I'm guessing you accidentally put your new post in the quotes. Nice to meet you! (to Tresio)
Yeah - noticed that a few seconds after I posted. Sorry - it's fixed now. And thanks for the greeting - I was searching the web for Prizm info, and found your forums! (Wish these had existed when I was in high school programming the TI-81...)
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« on: October 11, 2010, 05:34:15 pm »
edit: "With Casio, academic achievement never looked so good. The new fx-CG10/PRIZM is approved for use on the ACT, PSAT, SAT and AP Exams." if it's approved on all those exams, i doubt the math functions are as helpful as a nSpire CAS or TI 89, though.
The Prizm is definitely a non-CAS calculator. Ignoring programming for a moment, and considering only the out-of-the-box calculation capabilities, it's very difficult to compare Prizm and TI-89, because they have very different intended purposes. Similarly with NSpire CAS (though NSpire non-CAS would allow a more fair comparison).
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« on: October 11, 2010, 05:27:32 pm »
In the specs, it says it gets about 140 hours on batteries, I believe.
Wow 140 hours, I wonder if that's at the full processing power, cuz if it's the case, it's really epic o.o.
140 hours of battery life is estimated based on 5 minutes of processor-heavy calculations and 55 minutes of "rest" per hour. (This is the graphing calculator standard for estimated battery use.) For reference, most current GCs offer 120-140 hours of life. Helpful in this regard is the battery usage meter in Prizm's status bar. The Prizm will also accept an optional 85-hour rechargeable battery.
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