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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337
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56.0%
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No, I haven't been caught
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210
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34.9%
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No, playing games in class is wrong
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41
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6.8%
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No, I don't attend school/go to class
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14
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2.3%
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Re: Have you ever been caught playing calculator games in class?
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Tom Steele
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Sheesh...you guys actually get caught? =P
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7 October 1999, 00:39 GMT
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Re: Re: Have you ever been caught playing calculator games in class?
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Brian Overman
(Web Page)
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You have to be caught once in a while, unless your teacher is a blind idiot. Your sitting at your desk, staring at your calculator as you play mario or tetris, certainly not paying attention to the teacher. The teacher's going to catch on sooner or later. I've been caught several times since I got my 86 last Christmas. I've been caught in English, Business, History, Algebra, hmm, what other subjects do I have? Most teachers shrug it off, no big deal, but one REALLY mean teacher was telling our class that she knows how to clear a calculator's memory and if she catches anyone playing a game in her class, she will clear the memory. Thank GOD she's the exception!
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7 October 1999, 01:10 GMT
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Have you ever been caught playing calculator games in class?
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Kaxman
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I may be wrong, but I think I was told once that clearing a memory without the owner's consent is deliberate destruction of property. After all, Is there a big difference between some dumbass hacker saying format c: and some teacher pressing 2nd mem reset? Both deal with destruction of (on more advanced calculators, such as the 89 or 92, which you can take class notes on) perhaps valuable data, but nothing would happen to the teacher even if he intentionally erased a semesters worth of History that god knows you need for the final (yes that happened to me, and it really sucked, especially since we have to turn the notes in at the end of the end of the semester) This is unfair, but happily enough, someone invented 'au' for the 89, so i just keep important stuff archived in case of a crash.
Someone please let me know where i can find out about that destruction of property bit, as I would like to show my teachers something that says yay or nay. I'd appreciate it.
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9 October 1999, 01:30 GMT
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Have you ever been caught playing calculator games in class?
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David
(Web Page)
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I have *always* thought of resetting a calculator's memory without the owner's consent to be along the same lines as reformatting a computer’s hard drive without the owner’s consent. A computer would loose much more data, and there is a good chance that the only loss on the calc would be a few games that you could just get back again, HOWEVER, they don’t know that when they are resetting it! Luckily for me, teachers at my school just don’t seem to care enough to reset it. However, I don’t think that it is ever right to. For example, I had a math test today. Now, if someone reset my calc before the test, I would loose all of my math programs and score worse on the test. Now, I made those programs, and nobody else should be able to destroy them except me. If I suddenly decide to run one of them during my history class and the teacher doesn’t like it, there are other ways to handle it that don’t involve resetting it.
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14 October 1999, 05:07 GMT
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