

- #RPN SCIENTIFIC CALCULATOR FOR WINDOWS 10 HOW TO#
- #RPN SCIENTIFIC CALCULATOR FOR WINDOWS 10 CRACKED#
My original HP-35 calculator, dating from 1972. I still haul my HP 11c out of the desk drawer for this and that.
#RPN SCIENTIFIC CALCULATOR FOR WINDOWS 10 HOW TO#
Heck, Wolfram Alpha knows how to understand the command "integral sec3x dx."Īlternatives there may be, but I, as you may have detected, like the calculator application for sentimental reasons. When it's time for me to crunch some numbers, my computers and phone already have serviceable calculator applications spreadsheet software will probably let me do something more useful with the numbers if they actually are important to me and Google, Yahoo, and Bing will all do some math. With all the alternatives to pocket calculators, HP's line is probably as endangered a species today as the mechanical slide rules became decades ago when HP's first pocket-sized electronic calculator, the HP-35, arrived in 1972. I find the app prices high, and it's annoying the 15c costs twice the price of the 12c, but I guess HP is considering that a used 15c costs between $66 and $289 right now on eBay the models aren't for sale new anymore. With software-once it's developed-HP gets to sell it over and over for much less extra cost. The 12c new costs $80 in its physical incarnation, but HP must pay the cost of making each one.

Second, software comes with famously plump profit margins compared with hardware, even when you have to share a cut with Apple. Of course, they're a lot more likely to have their mobile phones with them than their calculators, no matter how pocketable they are, if indeed they still have the calculator at all. The software versions of HP calculators, announced Thursday, are clever applications for HP to sell for a number of reasons.įirst, HP attracted a lot of engineers, scientists, real estate agents, and Wall Street brokers with its calculators in years gone by, and the tool is genuinely useful still to those folks. In vertical orientation, the calculator app shows a basic set of functions.
#RPN SCIENTIFIC CALCULATOR FOR WINDOWS 10 CRACKED#
The $14.99 application is accompanied by a $29.99 emulator of the 15c scientific calculator, which is better at handling trigonometry and integration than mortgage payments and net present value.Īll that's missing is the pocket protector-like iPhone case, my colleague Ina Fried cracked as she mocked my nerdish tendencies. That's because my three-year-old son, an iPhone fan in his own preschool way, is about to be exposed to Hewlett-Packard's new iPhone application that fully emulates the company's 12c financial calculator. It looks like a fourth generation of my family is going to be introduced to the ways of reverse Polish notation calculators.
