Results
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Choice
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Votes
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Percent
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Yes
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159
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32.1%
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No
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337
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67.9%
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Re: Have you (or are you going to) buy/bought a new TI graphing calculator for going back to school?
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compman32386
(Web Page)
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I'm not buying a news calc because there is no calculator better than the TI-89.
-No voter #2
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12 August 2000, 18:27 GMT
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Have you (or are you going to) buy/bought a new TI graphing calculator for going back to school?
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Jonas Lööf
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Yes, absolutely! I remember when I started at the university. I had been using a simple scientific from Casio, and the last year of high school i had bought a ti85. Then I started Engenering Physics at Chalmers, that had a strict no calc policy the first year. It was hard to adjust, even though I hadn't been _that_ dependent on my calc. It was realy good thogh to finaly lern to do calculations fast, acuratly and reliably, in head or by hand. I can only imagine what it would have been like if I had used a ti89 in high school.
My advice is that, if you are going on to higher education later on, don't get to dependent on your calculator, especially if it's a ti89. Use it to explore the wonders of mathematics, even use it on tests (if youre allowed) if that will give you a higher grade. But don't fool yourself that _you_ can solve something just because your calc can. Allways lern how to solve all types of problem well by hand, otherwise you will find yoreself in your own personal hell, later on.
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17 August 2000, 16:08 GMT
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Have you (or are you going to) buy/bought a new TI graphing calculator for going back to school?
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TI83andTI89Owner
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The Story of My Life:
I was born.
I got into 7th grade.
My Mom bought me a TI-83.
After finding out the program editor wasn't a text editor, I felt it's power.
Then I bought a TI-89. I skipped all the others and went straight to the TI-89.
Then I bought a TI-86. This was the first calculator I bought with my own money. It was then that I was found to be a calculator freak.
Then I bought a TI-83 Plus.
Now, what does this have to do with anything? On the same day I bought a TI-83 Plus, I came *THIS* close to buying a TI-73, but didn't. I don't know what came over me. I was young. I was foolish. I am sorry.
That still has nothing to do with the post, but I voted, and though I own a TI-81, TI-83, TI-83 Plus, TI-86, and TI-89, never have I bought my own calculator solely for going back to school and actually using it for math.
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16 August 2000, 23:55 GMT
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12th Re: Have you (or are you going to) buy/bought a new TI graphing calculator for going back to school?
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Kai
(Web Page)
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They took geometry off the TI-92+, on the HW2 one I have. I agree that the TI´92 Plus is superflous sometimes, but it is a nice tool to have. Since (but not only since) they are not allowed on those big tests, I will get an 83+. I want a Flash calculator, that's just the way to go.
As for the color thing, I hope we're talking about REAL color, not the three color thing Casio has. There is really no point to that. But 256, or even 16 colors or more would be very nice.
As for 5th grade.......I remember wanting a scientific calculator then! I didn't even know what graphing calculators were.... So, I'm sorry, I don't believe you!
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24 August 2000, 17:45 GMT
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Cut the Re's please! Have you (or are you going to) buy/bought a new TI graphing calculator for going back to school?
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Universityman
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I started with an old Casio model 7700 series around 8'th grade, and that was maybe 24k RAM (total), 10 program slots. I could work that today for Algebra, Stats, etc., faster than a new boy with a TI-89 or 92. Now I work with 85 and 92+ basic programming, write advanced software for them, and so on, without flinching. But remember, always, WORK PROBLEMS BY HAND! That can't be stressed enough. If you can't do it yourself, why the hell are you using a calc to do it for you?
2 Cents by Universityman
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27 August 2000, 21:51 GMT
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TI-89 / 83+
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Necrosis
(Web Page)
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Hello, first off I am older that most people, a whopping 20 ;>... and have been through a lot of math :(. I am now a junior in college...and am in Linear Algebra / Differential equations (ya I know that is not all that high, but I am a cs major not a math).
Anyways, I got my first graphing calc (82) in 10th grade... it was not a bad decision, I was in algebra III... the next year I got an 85, then the next year an 86 (my senior year) then my freshman year of college I got a 92, then my sophomore year of college I got an 89. Calc II w/ the 89 sorta ruined me, I became lazy did pretty much all of my work on it. I paid for it in calc III.
Anyways to make a long story short I personally would not get an 89 before calc I, and would probabally wait until calc II toward the middle of the semester.
And yup, I bought every single calculator myself, with my own money that I earned!
I now own:
TI: 82, 83, 83+, 85, 86, 89, 92
HP: 49
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30 August 2000, 01:13 GMT
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Have you (or are you going to) buy/bought a new TI graphing calculator for going back to school?
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Krach42
(Web Page)
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Ok, everyone else has commented about their calculator experience, so here is mine. Until the 6th grade, I was strickly prohibited from using calculators. Despite this, I was doing 8th grade math in the 5th grade. Sometime in middle school, my dad gave me an old casio (can you say just enough memory to write the most basic BlackJack program in the world... that couldn't even tell if you busted until after you stand?) Anyways, that thing ran out of batteries after a while, and I never really had a reason to upgrade it. My Freshman year (9th for all of you out there that only have 3 years of high school) I entered Geometry, and again, I was unable to use a calculator. Then, my Sophmore and Junior year, I was allowed to use a calculator again, but guess what? It was mainly just the school provided calculator, which was... a 4 function calculator! (you remember those calculators, add, subtract, multiple, divide, maybe a percent and square root.) The thing was a TI, it was blue, it was square... but it worked! My senior year was a happy year without math...
So, all in all, when did I get my calculator? I bought a TI-86 before I got to college, because I was taking Calculus, and they "required" you to have a calculator of at least TI-85, and I had heard stories that they could be used for games. So, I bought a TI-86, and started building a link-cable (parrallel, I'm actually quite good now, after 3 some tries) Now, half way through the semester or so... probably earlier, for some unknown reason, my calculator died on me. *poof*! There she goes, and I'm left sans calc. So, I work on writing and emulator for it after deciding that all the other ones out there were insufficient. (This was before VTI, so don't moan about that) But it took longer to debug the thing, and get it running than before the final... and besides, I doubt my teacher would have let me have my computer in the room for the final... even if it WAS emulating a TI-86. ("Honestly teacher! I'm not cheating!")
Anyways, everyone else in the class had some calculator, often a TI-89, and complained when the teacher said that they shouldn't use their calculator. They griped "But how do we know if our answers are correct?" To which the teacher, striking a chord in me, said, "You can't just tell?" I guess if you spent your entire life actually DOING the math, you know if you're doing it right.
Of course, the real bane of everyone was me... after all, they complained "I'm a [insert some scientific field here] major, I'll never use Calculus in real life" To which I'd respond, "I'm a German major" and that took care of their complaints, considering that I wasn't paying any mind to the teacher, yet still passing quite comfortably. *evil laugh*
Sometimes it feels so good making people feel stupid... but then, it's just too easy sometimes...
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25 August 2000, 23:44 GMT
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Have you (or are you going to) buy/bought a new TI graphing calculator for going back to school?
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Jeff Meister
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Well, it depends. If your school system had you buy an 89 in 7th grade (I got one then too by the way), then when you get to calculus and everyone has no idea how to do all this stuff without their machine, that's not the student's fault.
As I said, I got an 89 in 7th grade (and an 83 a year or so before), and it's not really a crutch for me. Sure, when I have 100 problems on a subject I understand well, I might use the 89 on some of them when I'm just tired of it. But I'm not gonna take my homework and say "Hmm, I can't do this, let's just make the 89 do it for me!". That's not really how it works in my school system, if you use the calculator so much that you can't really do the math, when test time comes, you're gonna fail. And scores of "A A F" for the first semester don't look to great :)
So my entire 8th grade Algebra class had 83(+)'s, and the ones who realized you had to use the calculator as a tool, not a crutch, passed, and the ones who didn't, you guessed it, failed.
So to sum it up, yes the 89 will ruin Algebra for you, but only if you let it.
- Jeff
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15 August 2000, 02:57 GMT
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Have you (or are you going to) buy/bought a new TI graphing calculator for going back to school?
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Knight/Rocket
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I have to agree here, (gets slightly off subject) because when the US was building the first atomic bomb, computers(basically simple scientific calculators) were used- not because Einstein, Fermi, Oppenheimer, Bohr and the rest did not know how, but because doing every possible permutation was far too slow.
(back on subject)
If you truly understand the concept(graphing, trig, whatever) and a program or a particular calculator makes things easier for you, then more power to you.
But- if you are using a calculator to substitute for your own knowledge or to avoid learning it the hard way, put down the calculator, learn it, then come back to the calculator when you understand and will lose nothing by using it.
Just my 2.333 cents(inflation)
Knight/Rocket
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16 August 2000, 00:03 GMT
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Others' Programs
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calcfreak901
(Web Page)
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I never use other people's programs, nor do I distribute my own programs, except occasionally to ticalc.org and Dimension-TI. I have not even compared code with anyone else. I have taught friends very BASIC commands like Disp, OutPut, Goto, and Lbl, but that's about it. I have not taught them how to work with math commands in TI-BASIC.
I avoid using others' programs, at least for math and science, because I know to what extent my programs are tested. I also thoroughly debug my programs, although, thankfully, math and science programs are generally quite straightforward to do so. I also know that the mathematics are identical to that found in my textbooks. Since some facets of programs can be quite quirky (Can anyone figure out how to disable the automatic caps lock for request fields in dialog boxes in TI-89 BASIC?).
As far as leaving your calculator at home, I NEVER leave home, hardly even leave my room, without my TI-89. I even take it with me on roller coasters (velcro testing on cargo pockets)(lines can be very long, too).
e of pi and the unimatrix's 45.59985035114 cents
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21 August 2000, 08:10 GMT
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Others' Programs
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Universityman
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I have written hundreds of programs for Casio, all of the TI's, and computer languages, and I do use others' programs as well as my own. I respected the time my peers put into their programs, and we shared programs all the time. I learned some concepts by reverse engineering other peeps programs to understand the source code and basic ideas. Hell, with their permission, I would take their programs and condense and debug their work. One of my programs, Coordinate Geometry (not released), ended at version 1.7 with help from about 8 people.
But anyway, remember to understand their work before useing it. Maybe that doesn't go for games, but if it is math, science, etc., know your stuff before going to the calc.
2 Cents from Universityman
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27 August 2000, 22:07 GMT
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Have you (or are you going to) buy/bought a new TI graphing calculator for going back to school?
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Krach42
(Web Page)
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#include <stdio.h>
void rant(void)
{
printf("I much prefer C, because C++ is highly over bloated, and inconsistant\n"
"'course, I know all the little tricks in C/C++, and it just happens that C\n"
"is very much more often nice and clean.\n\n");
printf("BTW, don't _EVER_ declare your main to be void! This is because all\n"
"of C/C++ assumes main is an int, and if you exit(1); in a void main, then\n"
"all havoc will be let loose, and you will have completely undefined activities!\n\n");
}
int main(void)
{
rant();
printf("Anyways, not to turn this into a C/C++ programming style discussion...");
return 0;
}
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Reply to this comment
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25 August 2000, 23:52 GMT
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