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Which calculator? Hp 50G vs Ti89 Titanium |
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| Sep28-06, 04:05 PM | #18 |
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Which calculator? Hp 50G vs Ti89 Titanium
[QUOTE=George Jones
Have you not yet been taught the conventional order of operations?[/QUOTE] Arghhh what I meant was his teacher wanted him to: "take -2 to the fourth power" more of a wordish problem. Thanks for finding my error. |
| Oct8-06, 12:56 AM | #19 |
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Hello all,
i came across this forum searching some informations about the HP 50G calculator and was amused that this thread is getting more and more a fight pro and against RPN. I myself prefer to work using RPN and my problem is that i'm getting more and more difficulties using calculators not supporting RPN. This might be a reason for you not to start with RPN, but who wants to dismiss a Ferrari because afterwards he intends to change back to rollerblades? Now some of my experiences: I used a HP48G about ten years until it was getting damaged. This was one of my best calculators ever. So i buyed a HP49G and was disappointed with its poor quality: The keyboard didn't register the hits reliably and so i had to resend three calculators to be substituted. With my fourth HP49G (8 months old) the coating of the plate below the keyboard is beginning to flake, taking the labeling with it. My complaint at HP resulted in the promise to send me a HP50G for free. The staff at HP told me that the above (somehow common?) problems of the HP49G were solved with the HP50G and i really hope so. I'd be happy to hear experiences with the new HP50G. Nevertheless i never thought to change back from RPN and thus leave HP. So buying a HP you risk to get conditioned on RPN/HP, maybe another obstacle to change to RPN. But if you only want to give RPN a try without costs, you are invited to play with my RPNcalculator available for free (under the GPL) at my website http://www.h-bauer.de/index.html?rpncalc,eng. I programmed this utility because sometimes i could not discover my HP below my heavily loaded desk and thus needed to use the keyboard of my pc. I hope this reply is suitable to clarify some prejudices concerning RPN. Make yourself an impression, then decide which calculator is best suited for you. Best wishes Hans |
| Oct11-06, 05:15 AM | #20 |
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Hi there! As I have seen, you all started a war between RPN and Algeabric. But the importance isn't there. The importance is in how everybody wants to fullfil his needs. Why I say this? I am an engineer, so I need quick results (approximate or axect), usage of units, to calculate special functions like Bessel, find a transfer function, to plot a Bode or a Nyquist plot and calculate complex integrals using Poisson's formula. So, from my point of view, I need a powerful CAS utility which TI89-Titanium has. The programs supported for TI are plenty and everyone can find them.
In conlcusion, I believe TI89-Titanium is the perfect choice; unless you don't have to take part in exams, so the best solution is Voyage 200. Have a nice day all of you! |
| Oct11-06, 08:07 AM | #21 |
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If you want to try the calculators out before you buy...get the emulators
i know you can download the hp49 emulator from their website somewhere.. as for the ti89...get this program http://lpg.ticalc.org/prj_tiemu/ it doesnt need a rom image,instead it uses the operating system files provided free by ti for updating the calculator. Go here to pick whatever calc os you want: http://education.ti.com/educationpor...ps_latest.html also i been using a ti89 for years and it's really good...if you get it...be sure to install this program on their: http://technicalc.org/packages/eqw/eqw.htm it adds an invaluable equation writer...something the hp calc have, that the ti89 doesnt come with... having said that...their really isn't any differance, besides memory and size and screensize, between ti89 and the tivoyager... also i hear the memory allotment is same between voyager and ti89 titanium... so it's up to you :P |
| Oct16-06, 01:06 PM | #22 |
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I use Ti-86. The screen and functions are simpler than Ti-89 and it does pretty much everything you can do with Ti-89. Not to forget it's cheaper. I have never encountered a problem that requires extreme processing power during my engineering exams. For those cases, try Matlab or Mathematica.
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| Oct26-06, 12:41 PM | #23 |
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You can easily do RPN on the ti-89 with a download from TI. Get yourself the TI, you'll be very happy. |
| Oct26-06, 07:38 PM | #24 |
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| Oct27-06, 12:19 AM | #25 |
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Hello FrogPad,
thank you a lot for your link to the rpn-software for TI89. Now I tend to give the TI a try. But as i was reading on other sites, there are several changes between the TI89 and the TI89-Titanium and some software need a redesign to run on Titanium. Does anyone know if the rpn-software (last update 2000) is compatible with the TI89-Titanium? Thanks a lot |
| Oct27-06, 10:07 AM | #26 |
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send http://www.paxm.org an email asking them, or you could ask on http://www.ticalc.org. Just so you know I haven't used the software. If you have a few days to spare, I'll try it on my calculator soon. Probably not today or tomorrow... definitely by Monday though. |
| Nov7-06, 05:24 PM | #27 |
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Something sounds strange here. I would understad the list like this:
and frankly speaking that "powerful" qualifier sounds way too much like an advertizing. So, yeah, people using HP don't know TI-slang abbreviations, but that's no reason to use it in a misleading way.So, what's the actual deal here? If TI-89 is built in a way that for many things one needs extra software (some of that in assembler?) then one has to start asking integration questions at the very least. For example, if one has to download (and install) separate software in order to get RPN-something, does it interact with everything else. For example in HP-s RPN one can type in algebraic formula (not your granma's HP :-), let it sit on the stack, push a few more, actually calculate with formulas as items on the stack, same for values with measurement units or strings. That is where the ultimate ease of use comes for RPN-loving folks - the allowance to not care about naming everything, storing everything, but just leaving it to sit on the stack and using it. So basically the same modus operandi that makes evaluation of simple numerical formulas so fast and simple for the RPN lover gets extended to the world where you have symbolic formulas and whatever else one can put on the stack (yes the object stack - kind of :-). Now if this was programmer's forum one might argue the benefit of actually having Motorola 68000, and assembler etc. as an education tool. Even then the question would be does one really have the time and reason to spend coding assembler for the good old 68K if he could be doing multiproc stuff on DualCore-something with the same investemnt of time and effort. The key thing here however is that these days one doesn't really need/want to fiddle with and maintain "software" for a calculator just to do a simple thing like pushing a few numbers on a stack I might even be tempted by the 68K inside TI-89 just for the sake of it. However my bigggest complaintys against TI-89 and alikes is BULK. I know the great state of Texas is big and it comes natural to build things BIG , but my wrists have a finite capacity and these days there is no rational excuse for a graphing calculator to be nearly as big. Emulators for PDA-s anyone? ![]() So, besides the RPN which goes way beyond just punching in a few numbers, and not having to chase software for obvious and simple things, my principal trust with HP is that they don't have the tradition of BULK, that their calculator is always going to be thinner, lighter, more modern if you like. |
| Nov14-06, 05:31 PM | #28 |
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I have used both TI and HP. I was a diehard TI fan for many years. When I was using my TI calculators I hated the thought of using HP RPN mode. We used many programs at work written for hp and I went as far as to convert them to TI because I thought TI was better. It was extremely difficult to convert a working HP program to TI.
After I converted several programs from HP to TI, I tried the reverse and converted several TI programs to HP RPN. I was amazed in how easy this process was. I have never used any of my TI calculators since. After using both types extensively, I have to admit that RPN will spoil you once you start using it. It is using a calculator in the natural way we think. I have never found a person who uses RPN that has ever switched back to non-RPN. I have found many non-RPN users who now use RPN. Once you go RPN there is no going back. I like to do things the easy way. Once you seriously use RPN, you will understand its simplicity. I guess I’m a little lazy at heart. Once I do something in an easier simpler way, I refuse to go back and do it the hard way. I guess that is why I have never seen anyone who has taken the time to learn RPN ever go back to their old ways. The choice is yours. You can be stubborn and refuse to do it an easier way and swear by TI. Or you can switch to an easier way using HP RPN. The only problem I see is that once you go RPN, you will never want to go back to the calculator you used before. Do you want to do it the simple or hard way?…only you can make that choice. And for you TI die hards: How can you make a TI – HP comparison unless you have spent the time doing both? I have not met a HP user that has not used a TI. I have never met a TI user that has not learned RPN that does not have something bad to say about RPN. They are used to doing things the hard way and believe RPN is hard so they never take the time to learn RPN. And they have no problem putting RPN down. I’m an RPN user. I don’t have anything against people who what to do things in a harder way. But please don’t try to convince someone harder is better then easier. Easier will always be easier and I prefer the easy way. |
| Nov16-06, 07:34 AM | #29 |
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Hello again,
as i stated in #19 above, i received an HP50g-replacement for my former unusable HP49g calculators and now i'm able to share my experiences with this new model. First of all, the pros:
Then the cons:
Hope this helps to make your decision. Best wishes Hans Bauer |
| Nov16-06, 07:52 AM | #30 |
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The HP50g also has the equation and constant library that th HP48 calculators. The HP49g does not have these.
The HP50g also has a new flash update. A professor at one of the colleges found a problem with the HP50g that HP had to correct to make it work for the class he taught. |
| Nov16-06, 09:01 AM | #31 |
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Hi jaschandler,
thanks for your hint for the new flash update 2.09 for HP49g and HP50g. But at http://www.hpmuseum.org/cgi-sys/cgiw...cgi?read=99782 I found Hans Bauer |
| Nov19-06, 03:17 PM | #32 |
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You can set that keytime value as a startup default by creating a program as follows, between the quotes - "<< 400 ->KEYTIME >>". Store it in the home directory as a file named STARTUP. Reboot cause STARTUP to be executed (also good for setting you own default system flags). HP support should have answered this quickly. |
| Nov19-06, 04:29 PM | #33 |
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Ok I put RPN on my 89 and am trying to figure out what makes it so great.
Something I often do with my 89 is evaluate an expression for different values. Let me give an example: Lets say you have (a+b)/b Now I want to evaluate this at {a=1, b=2; a=2, b=1} for example: with an 89 I can do, (a+b)/b|a=1 and b=2 I can press enter and see a result, now if I want to quickly change a number I go back to the result screen and press enter, this comes up: (a+b)/b|a=1 and b=2 I then just change what I want by using the arrow keys, (a+b)/b|a=2 and b=1 is there a quick way for evaluating expressions using RPN ? |
| Nov19-06, 07:31 PM | #34 |
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As with your TI such a trick is not part of the basic functionality. You run a special program on the TI, likewise you would run a program on a RPN calculator. This is especially true for calculations more complex then your example.
Rather then looking for duplication of higher level functionality you would do well just to work with the basic RPN to see how well it works with first simple then more complex calculations. |
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