Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Texas Instruments Nspire CX N3/CLM/1L1 Graphing Calculator

!±8±Texas Instruments Nspire CX N3/CLM/1L1 Graphing Calculator

Brand : Texas Instruments
Rate :
Price : $119.99
Post Date : Dec 27, 2011 11:57:24
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Stay mobile, continue learning - Transfer class assignments from handheld to computer (PC and Mac). Complete work outside of school using student software. On the desktop at home or a laptop on the bus, at the library, coffee shop wherever. Visualize in full color - Color-code equations, objects, points and lines on the full-color, backlit display. Make faster, stronger connections between equations, graphs and geometric representations on screen. Real-world images - Use digital images or your own photos. Overlay and color-code math and science concepts. Discover real-world connections. Recharge with ease, the TI-Nspire Rechargeable Battery, installed with the handheld, is expected to last up to two weeks of normal use on a single charge. No alkaline batteries needed. The sleek TI-Nspire CX handheld is the thinnest and lightest TI graphing calculator model to date. It's also the brightest with a high-resolution, full-color display that makes it easy to see every exponent, variable and line. 3D Graphing - Graph and rotate (manually and automatically) 3D functions. Change the wire or surface color of your 3D graph.

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Saturday, November 19, 2011

The Top 6 Calculator Apps For the iPhone

!±8± The Top 6 Calculator Apps For the iPhone

Our recent article on the top 6 calculator apps for Android was a big hit, and since then we've been getting search inquiries about iOS. You asked for it, and we are delivering. We've searched out Apple's app store for our favorite 6 calculator apps for the iPhone and iPod touch. Since there was a wide disparity in cost of apps, we set the ground rule that we were searching for apps that cost less than . In fact, this list turned out to be our favorite 6 iPhone calculator apps for under .

#1 Graphing Calculator+ by xNeat.com

Graphing Calculator+ is our pick for the best all around iPhone calculator app. It greatest strength is that it does so many different things well. A switch button takes you easily between the calculators different modes. Those modes are graphing, scientific, handwriting, a polynomial calculator, and linear equations calculator. There's still room for improvement. In particular, we wish the scientific calculator had fractions, and that the grapher had trace. But the app is simple and powerful, and the fact that it automatically finds max, min, intercepts, and intersection points pretty much makes up for the lack of trace.

Pros: Handwriting support, graphing scientific, quadratic and cubic solver, systems of linear equations

Cons: Handwriting mode not always accurate, decimals only

Cost: .99

#2 Graphicus by Serafim Chekalkin

We are huge fans of Graphicus. If only every graphing calculator were this easy to use. No need to read the user manual here, just jump right in. Graphicus brings you almost all the information you could want about Cartesian, polar, and parametrics graphs in an incredibly elegant interface. Trace, extrema, inflection points, tangent lines are all readily available with a few taps of your finger. On the downside, there is no simple scientific calculator. It's also a minor bummer that there's no 3D in an app that's 100% focused on graphing, but there's only one app on this list that has 3D.

Pros: Offers everything graphical, intercepts, trace, inflection points, max/min, complete

Cons: Just a grapher

Cost: .99

#3 Symbolic Calculator by Janos Barkai

If you need a CAS for your iPhone, this is the app for you. For those who have used a TI-89, you'll feel right at home with with Symbolic Calculator. The focus of this app is it's computer algebra system, and the interface is pretty easy to use for those familiar with Texas Instrument's CAS calculators. If you're new to CAS's, just tap the question mark next to a given command, and an example will pop up demonstrating how to use the syntax appropriately. You can also use this app to graph, although it feels a little counter-intuitive until you get the hang of it, and the graphing features are simplistic compared to some of the other apps on this list.

Pros: For a CAS, simple to use, offers example input for each

Cons: Graphing could be nicer, mathprint only after inputting

Cost: $.99

#4 Graph It by Tezmo

Another excellent grapher is Graph It. This is also full featured grapher, which offers the ability to trace, find intercepts, and roots, as well as graph derivatives and integrals. It also offers a full scientific calculator with two-line display. The user interface is ok, but might take some getting used to for some users, particularly for the scientific calculator mode.

Pros: Full featured grapher, also a full scientific calculator

Cons: UI takes a little getting used to

Cost: $.99

#5 Quick graph by Columbiamug

For those in need of a 3D graphing app, Quick Graph is the way to go. There are other positives here too such as a strong user interface, simple to use polar coordinates,and a good 2D graphing interface. Screen caps are another built in feature. The real selling point, though, is the 3D, which is well rendered and even accepts cylindrical and spherical coordinates. It is possible to use this app as a scientific calculator, but the interface feels a little strange.

Pros: Polar and 3D, screen caps of graphs

Cons: No trace features, don't feel designed for non-graphing calculation

Cost: Free

#6 Powerone LE by Infinity Softworks

Not everyone is looking for a fancy grapher. For those looking for a more standard scientific calculator, Powerone LE fits the bill. It's got a very intuitive interface that you'll pick up right away. Powereone also features unit conversion and a currency converter that stays current to international currency exchange rates. Additionally, its got a simple statistics calculator that finds the mean of a series of numbers. It could be better if the scientific features used a two-line interface.

Pros: Easy to use, nice UI, currency/unit converter, stays current, simple statistical analysis

Cons: One line calculation, no graphing

Cost: Free with option to upgrade to more powerful version for .99


The Top 6 Calculator Apps For the iPhone

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Monday, October 24, 2011

TI-Nspire, Future of Texas Instruments

!±8± TI-Nspire, Future of Texas Instruments

For over 15 years, Texas Instruments has owned the graphing calculator marketplace. Since the release of the TI-81 graphing calculator, TI has grown their following by improving that original TI-81 into the TI-82, TI-83, TI-83 plus, and eventually, the TI-84 plus. The TI-84 plus is still remarkably close to the TI-81. Despite the fact that the TI-84 has been incredibly popular, it's a dated device. Texas Instruments realized it was time for a new platform.

So in in 2007, Texas Instruments made public their new calculator, the Nspire. The improved features from the old product line were striking. On the old TI-84, the menus were odd at best, nonsensical at worst. It was hard for beginners just to figure out which button to push, and then the menu would fill the entire screen. With the Nspire, drop down menus are the norm, meaning students can stay in the screen they were working on and pull down a menu the way they would on a computer. Among other features are the highest resolution screen available on a calculator, the ability to save documents, a spreadsheet mode, mathprint for virtually all mathematical symbols, and a vastly improved system for graphing equations, simplifying the 84's ancient interface.

Frankly, the TI-Nspire made the TI-84 look like a dinosaur, and yet, the first reaction in the market was tepid. Why? TI didn't anticipate the reaction of two influential groups. First, despite positive TI-Nspire review s, educators were initially hesitant to adopt the Nspire. Many had just spent too much in the old TI-84. That was the case both in terms of the time invested learning the TI-84 and in terms of the school budget invested on classroom sets of TI-84 calculators. Texas Instruments tried to ease that consternation by offering a TI-84 keyboard that made the TI-Nspire look and act like a TI-84, but many felt that defeated the purpose of the Nspire. The other group that was cautious about the Nspire was the hacker community. At first, the TI-Nspire didn't offer programming as an option. Later, an OS upgrade offered some programming, but it wasn't enough to win over the programmers.

Lately, the Nspire has been gaining traction. Texas Instruments has noticed, getting rid of the Silver Edition of the TI-84. Now, however, TI finally faces competition from a competitor's calculator, not just its own TI-84. Casio has revealed its answer to the TI-Nspire. The Casio Prizm offers many of the same features as the TI-Nspire at almost the same cost, but offers two extra features with backlighting and the ability to display color pictures. The Prizm is set to be out in January 2011.

The Nspire finally has traction with buyers, but will face tough competition from the Prizm. The question now is whether the educator loyalty and user support they've created over the last 20 years will be enough for the TI-Nspire.


TI-Nspire, Future of Texas Instruments

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