Firefly
Active member
What calculator did you use/prefer for the exam?
+1the one I studied with.
I've been a proud member of the HP cult since 1987. Once I got past the initiation ceremony where $350 of my money was sacrificed for an HP-41CV, it's served me well.The HP group is their own separate cult which I choose not to participate with...
I'm not sure if my TI can interpolate, but it does make a mean cup of coffee.So anyone know which, if any, TIs interpolate?
I was suckered into being a member of the HP cult in 1998. A nearby HP plant donated calculators to the local schools to brainwash students with RPN. As a result, I tend to avoid any calculators that have an "=" sign instead of "ENTER."I've been a proud member of the HP cult since 1987. Once I got past the initiation ceremony where $350 of my money was sacrificed for an HP-41CV, it's served me well.
Ditto.I was accustomed to using TI graphing calculators before studying for the exam. For the exam I bought a TI-36x solar and a Casio fx-115MS. I found that I preferred using the Casio. I had both calculators with me when I took the exam.
i would put out there that there is just as much of a TI cult as an HP cult. How many have their TI-8* whatevers because thats what University XYZ (or even high school) curriculum stated (or recommended) you would need? The HP cult is a choice, I think entirely (or mostly) because of preference for RPN (though why so F'n pricey!?) - whereas the TI one seems to be force-fed down most STEM major students throats.^^^The TI-86 is just an imposter of the great HP 48g. Maybe you should take a hint from the name and 86 the TI for a decent HP.
Although I can't be too critical since I was forced to buy a cheap TI for a chemistry course in college. The chemistry department mandated that all students had to use one of the 3 or 4 approved calculators for exams - none of them were HP or RPN.
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