Re: TI-95 ?


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Re: TI-95 ?



The TI-95 was an old programmable calculator...
(From the New Calc-TI FAQ at http://www.efd.lth.se/~d96mli/tifaq.txt)
(FAQ compiled my Mattias Lindqvist)


2.14 Q: I heard about a calculator called TI-95. What's that?
     A: Terry Donahue <ti-cares@ti.com>:
        The TI-95 was introduced by Texas Instruments in mid 1986 and was
        discontinued in late 1989. It had 36K of built-in ROM and 8K of
        built-in RAM, with 7200 bytes of RAM available to the user. It had
        a QWERTY keyboard with 65 keys. It also used software cartridges
        (32K) and RAM cartridges (8K). It used an algebraic operating
        system, had 15 levels of parenthesis, 8 pending operations, and
        over 200 functions. It also had an "ASM" function which increased
        program execution by converting label addresses used by the
        program into absolute addresses. This product is not to be
        mistaken with TI's newest graphing calculator, the TI-92.


At 17:03 11/9/96 -0500, Amandio Rua wrote:
>I wonder if their is a TI-95. I heard a rumor that TI has just released a
>their new calculator, Tthe TI-95. I wounder if their is anyt truth to
>this rumor. I aoopologize for how crude this message appears. Their was
>some disruption on my end.
>
>
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