I inherited a Keuffel & Esser slide rule during my high school days from my next-door neighbor, who was a professional drag racer -- he used a slide rule to do the calculations for his engine designs. I used the K&E throughout high school, college, grad school, and my postdoc. I still have the slide rule, but now I seldom use it.
Somewhere along the way, I started using an HP-15c and an HP-11c. I was hooked on RPN from the get-go, and I still prefer it even on calculator emulators on my computers.
As for calculator emulators, along with RPN when I can get it, I also like calculators that use exact notation for the fundamental numbers such as e, i, and pi. If a calculator knows that e^(i*pi) +1 = 0, then it's got my vote.
Calculator Issues
- Hypersphere
- Location: USA
- Main keyboard: Silenced & Lubed HHKB (Black)
- Main mouse: Logitech G403
- Favorite switch: Topre 45/55g Silenced; Various Alps; IBM Model F
- DT Pro Member: 0038
- vometia
- irritant
- Location: Somewhere in England
- Main keyboard: Durrr-God with fancy keycaps
- Main mouse: Roccat Malarky
- Favorite switch: Avocent Thingy
- DT Pro Member: 0184
I upgraded my brick to a "slimline" one in the early '80s ish, except that the battery compartment wasn't slimline so it was quite an odd-looking thing.fohat wrote: I went through school using a slide rule (calculators became commonly available about halfway through my time in college but cost $350 and couldn't even do square roots, so I did not buy one until later).
I bought my first TI-30 somewhere in the early-mid-1980s and have used them ever since. When I run across one at a salvage store or a yard sale for $1-$2 I usually buy it for a backup. For a brief time, in the 1990s I think, there was a thin-profile variant with rubbery buttons that I really liked, but they are hard to find now.
I can see the attraction of RPN but I'm not sure my brain wants to work that way: all that sort of stuff like Lisp and Forth was always a bit alien to me.Hypersphere wrote: I inherited a Keuffel & Esser slide rule during my high school days from my next-door neighbor, who was a professional drag racer -- he used a slide rule to do the calculations for his engine designs. I used the K&E throughout high school, college, grad school, and my postdoc. I still have the slide rule, but now I seldom use it.
Somewhere along the way, I started using an HP-15c and an HP-11c. I was hooked on RPN from the get-go, and I still prefer it even on calculator emulators on my computers.
As for calculator emulators, along with RPN when I can get it, I also like calculators that use exact notation for the fundamental numbers such as e, i, and pi. If a calculator knows that e^(i*pi) +1 = 0, then it's got my vote.
I ended up getting the TI-36X Pro in the end: it seems to do everything I'm ever likely to need (even though it gets confused by the e^iπ thing) bearing in mind I'm a C hacker, not a mathematician. I really quite like it actually, although lighter than I'd expected it seems solidly made and its display is rather fancy-pants for someone who grew up with eight digits of LED. The buttons have a reasonably nice feel to them though the embossed silver ones are indeed a bit of a design oversight.
As for slide-rules, maybe I'll give them a try when I grow up.

- Ace
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- Location: TX, USA
- Main mouse: Magic Mouse/Trackpad 2
- Favorite switch: Membrane Buckling Spring
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You bought the TI-36X, I see. Just came to say I love the Ti 84. After I got used to beating it around the bag, I stoped caring about the wonky build quality. I won't be changing it for my first year of college.
Last edited by Ace on 28 Aug 2017, 07:50, edited 1 time in total.
- JP!
- Location: United States
- Main keyboard: Currently a Model M
- Main mouse: Steel Series Sensei
- Favorite switch: Beam Spring
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I picked up a scratched up old TI-86 for $1 at a garage sale. Works great but the menu system is slightly different than say a Ti-83/84.