The replica comes close to the look and feel of the original, but the special tactility and appearance of the keys on the original are better.
Hp 17bii Emulator For Mac Windows 10Ĭurrently, I have a replica of the HP-15c and an original HP-11c. Throughout my career, I have owned a variety of HP desktops and hand-helds. The lab also had an HP desktop that could run programs from magnetic cards I think it was one of the 9800 series, but I am not sure. When in grad school, I used one of the first hand-held HPs I think it was the HP-35. HP calculators are among my favorite things.
, 17:19 Engicoder Posts: 814 Joined:, 14:44 Location: NC, USA DT Pro Member: 0117. It sits in a drawer in my kitchen and calculates all sorts of random things for me.
The former owner was an engineer for HP.īelieve it or not the 15C is something of a daily driver now. I checked Craigslist and, sure enough, someone was having an estate sale and selling one of these. XMIT:I did eventually find an HP-15C! I happened to be heading to the Bay Area for work.
, 04:19 tigpha Posts: 262 Joined:, 20:54 Location: United Kingdom Main keyboard: IBM Bigfoot + Arduino Main mouse: Kensington Orbit Trackball Favorite switch: IBM Model F buckling spring DT Pro Member:. I have little use for one today, but the nostalgia.
Reverse Polish too, my first encounter with the concept of a stack in computing - I first learnt to program on the HP67, the hacking bug bit then and stayed. The feel of the buttons is unmatched, especially compared to the contemporary Texas Instruments that were legion back then (yuk). Inside was crafted with love and skill like I have rarely seen. Weight of a brick, and durability to match. Long ago I had the privilege to use an HP67 while still at school. Just cleaning up and wanted to post this here as there might be some fans here. Does anyone know if there are any 10BII emulators except the HP's? Any language or OS is ok. Any open source HP 10BII emulators? Message #1 Posted by John on 5 June 2013, 2:54 p.m. The series include the HP 48S, HP 48SX, HP 48G, HP 48GX, and HP 48G+, the G models being expanded and improved versions of the S models. The HP 48 is a series of graphing calculators using Reverse Polish Notation (RPN) and the RPL programming language, produced by Hewlett-Packard from 1990 until 2003.
I paid 200 for the printer and 70 or so for the calc but these printers sell for opver 200 on eBay. It connects to the calc via infrared and uses thermal printing. I managed to find two of these from a dealer in Spain a few years ago and sold one. These are no longer made and cost a lot when you find them on eBay. No packaging since it comes in a blister. The calc is as new, never used, just tried out a few minutes. HP 17bII+, a fairly recent HP calculator which still has the infrared printing capability.