
Secondly, since ti introduced two new products that they are not prepared to supply, don't you get an uneasy feeling about the way they do business? Next and very importantly, we live in a 3D world and nearly everything that happens in it, can be described by differential equations. So lets just think of them as TI's imaginary calculators. First of all, the two calculators in the pictures that you posted above are NOT available(!), and I could get no date from ti as to when they will be. I think even the most fanatic Casio and Hewlett-Packard people have to admit that Texas Instruments remains the leading company in calculator technology.
Ti nspire laplace series#
TI has shown with their nspire series that they are no longer the leading company in calculator technology so it is time to move on to the better alternatives. They could have scooped the entire calculator industry by offering 3d graphing of several surfaces but what did they do? They eliminated 3d graphing entirely from their latest designs and offer gimmics like a scratch pad. TI seems to have lost sight of the fact that a calculator is a math machine and therefore should first of all offer superior math capability.

And there never was Laplace or Fourier transform capability in the TI calculators. Their latest cas design has significantly "dumbed down" math capability.


Yes, they used to be thought of as a leader in calculator technology but their nspire series has severly tarnished that reputation.
