![]() Cost: Working pros care less about cost and more about getting the job done.When buying an HP scientific calculator, consider whether you’re a technical professional, student, or a high school teacher, then check out the following details: Brad Spry has updated details to Widow's Might: Non-emergency buttons for Elders.There are a few different reasons to buy a scientific calculator, which means different people will need different specs.FooPlinger liked Steampunk? Neon Digital Clock.Aryaman liked GMC(Gesture and Myoelectric control).TazwellJ has added a new log for FULLY Automated Pico Garden Waterer v2.ajlitt liked Ball-in-box simulator with REAL gravity.Ishan Sinha liked Nuclear Magnetic Resonance for Everyone.Ishan Sinha liked DextrEMS: Enhancing Communication through Haptic.David Moreno Montero has updated the project titled Modular Multichannel Stereo Audio Mixer.Chris on Commodore 64 Web Server Brings 8-Bit Into The Future.KC on IR Camera Is Excellent Hacking Platform.Jerry on Farewell American Computer Magazines. ![]() ![]() KE8EAZ on Is MINIX Dead? And Does It Matter?.Thinkerer on IR Camera Is Excellent Hacking Platform.ethzero on IR Camera Is Excellent Hacking Platform.Artenz on Is MINIX Dead? And Does It Matter?.Anonymous on Is MINIX Dead? And Does It Matter?.We need the Arduino of low power handheld devices!Īll Your Robots Are Belong To Us: You Just Rent Them 34 Comments The eco footprint isn’t all THAT much worse than a real calculator, so we might as well have 10 identical multi purpose gadgets in different cases, dedicated to one use, rather than 10 separate things that aren’t much cheaper, only do one thing, and are lower quality because there’s no economy of cale, and can’t be reprogrammed. Imagine if these had ZigBee and could be sold directly with smart bulb kits! I think walkie talkies are probably one of them, imagine FRS over ZigBee with multi-week standby battery life! Or magneting one to the fridge as a dedicated kitchen timer/barbecue thermometer receiver. There’s a lot of miscellaneous stuff that doesn’t quite belong in a phone that could be rolled into calculators. Simple and cheap enough to have a few laying around without worrying about charging every day or costing too much, not trying to compete with phones so they don’t need power wasting features. I really would love to see something like this based on a ZigBee/Bluetooth SOC.Ī calculator is the perfect base for smarthome control just like phones were the perfect integration point for everything else. Posted in handhelds hacks Tagged calculator, reverse polish notation, RPN, RPN calculator, Scientific Calculator Post navigation If RPN interests you, it’s a subject we’ve looked at in greater detail in the past. All the resources can be found in a GitHub repository, so if RPN is your thing there’s nothing to stop you building one for yourself. The key legends are a set of printable stickers, which when printed on self-adhesive laser film prove durable enough to last. It runs from a CR2032 which is more than can be said for some modern styles of calculator, and it gives the user everything you could wish for in a scientific calculator. This glorious specimen is an open hardware RPN calculator with more than a nod to the venerable Hewlett Packard HP42 in its design.Īt its heart is an STM32L476 low-power ARM processor and a Sharp Memory LCD, all on a PCB clad in a 3D-printed case you’d have been proud to own in the 1980s. Since classic models from the 1970s and ’80s are rather pricey, ’s just build his own called the OpenCalc. Unfortunately for RPN enthusiasts, the RPN calculator is a little on the rare side. Why reach for a bland, commercially available calculator when you be using a model that employs RPN (Reverse Polish Notation) in its calculations and be a custom build all at the same time? The kids may have colour TFTs and graphing functions, but your keyboard has no equals sign, and that means something.
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