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DrawInvShade(63)DispGraphRepeat getKeyEndShade(47)
i was pretty quick to pull out a battery so no harm done to my calc.
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Okay, I did my research. This is what appears to be happening. I believe that there is a very short voltage spike between changing contrast from a very low value to a very high value and vise versa. You don't see the screen turn blue normally becasue its so fast that you can't even see it. However, if you alternate the screen very rapidly, the voltage spike appears often enough that it becomes very noticeable. So this is a faulty hardware problem and there is nothing I can do about it. I'll just have to trust that you're all being safe about using it.Here were some clues that led me to my hypothesis:You can't get the calculator to stay in a blue state unless the contrast is constantly changingThe degree of blueness is continuous. There is not a single shade of blue.The degree of blueness is directly proportional to the difference of the values you alternate betweenThe degree of blueness is inversely proportional to the amount of pause you haveAll of these suggest that the calculator is NOT in test mode. So this blue is actually less voltage on average than test mode, but that still doesn't mean its remotely safe. It probably won't fry your calculator right away like the real test mode, but it can certainly damage it over a longer period. I absolutely do not recommend exploiting this effect.