Calculators Upload pictures to TI-89 Titanium

AI Thread Summary
Users are seeking ways to upload bitmap/jpeg images of graphs created in Excel to a calculator, but face challenges due to the low resolution of the calculator's screen, which degrades image quality. While StudyCards can be used to view images, the quality is insufficient for practical use. Suggestions include uploading raw data for the calculator to generate graphs directly, though this may not be feasible for hand-drawn figures. Alternatives mentioned include using specific file viewers like NOSTUB and platforms like eSnips for file storage, which allows for private and shared access to files with a generous storage limit.
Hebe
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
Hello!

I would really appreciate any help with this.

I have a lot of graphs etc that I made in excel, and stored as bitmap/jpeg files. I would like to upload these to the calc. It does not matter where, as long as I can retrieve them with some ease.

So far I have learned that I can use StudyCards to view the images, but the quality is so low this is useless.

Does anyone have any ideas?
 
Computer science news on Phys.org
Hebe said:
So far I have learned that I can use StudyCards to view the images, but the quality is so low this is useless.

Does anyone have any ideas?


The resolution of the calculator's screen is lacking, so you won't be able to get the bmp files to look good no matter how you slice it.

My suggestion would be to put the raw data from the graphs on the calculator, so it can graph them itself on-screen.
 
Thanks for your reply.

The problem is, these are figures made for my micro economics class.
And I draw them by freehand, lines and arrows go here and there :rolleyes:
No way I can figure out how to put this into the calc graph by myself.

So, then I guess I`m doomed...:cry:
 
http://www.ticalc.org/archives/files/fileinfo/75/7517.html" : you can make big pictures and scroll around.

http://www.ticalc.org/archives/files/fileinfo/168/16893.html" : NOSTUB viewer.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Try eSnips (www.esnips.com)[/URL]. You can upload any type of file to eSnips and you can decide what you keep private and what you share with others. And you get 1GB free to store it all.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Well, the date has now passed, and Windows 10 is no longer supported. Hopefully, the readers of this forum have done one of the many ways this issue can be handled. If not, do a YouTube search and a smorgasbord of solutions will be returned. What I want to mention is that I chose to use a debloated Windows from a debloater. There are many available options, e.g., Chris Titus Utilities (I used a product called Velotic, which also features AI to prevent your computer from overheating etc...
I have been idly browsing what Apple have to offer with their new iPhone17. There is mention of 'Vapour cooling' to deal with the heat generated. Would that be the same sort of idea that was used in 'Heat Pipes' where water evaporated at the processor end and liquid water was returned from the cool end and back along a wick. At the extreme high power end, Vapour Phase Cooling has been used in multi-kW RF transmitters where (pure) water was pumped to the Anode / or alternative Collector and...

Similar threads

Replies
1
Views
5K
Replies
1
Views
16K
Replies
5
Views
5K
Replies
3
Views
3K
Replies
2
Views
7K
Replies
1
Views
8K
Back
Top