The TI-85 files
For people who forgot how to use theirs: Turn it ON first!

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TI-89 Titanium review

I have recently recieved a TI-89 Titanium, and the first thing I noticed was the flashy design. But when I went to turn it on, the keys were not very springy. But I was amazed at what I saw as I turned it on. I immediately sent games to it, and they run too fast on its 16MHz 68K.

Speed: *****
It's faster than 7 macs, and math is done twice as fast.
Graphics: *****
Excellent! 16 grayscale in BASIC coding!
Features: *****
Everything you need, and user defined functions can be added!
Ease of use: ***
Unless you have the old TI-89 or the manual, it's hard to use.
Gaming:***
Very fun and a good finger exercise. Many assembly programs incompatible.
Overall: ****
Very good for a past TI-84+SE user or TI-92 user. Unless you need the memory or USB, it's not worth the money for a TI-89 user.

TI-84 Plus Review

When I saw it, it resembled my TI-89 Titanium, except the white screen border and the slightly blueish casing. When I opened the case, I noticed the smaller keys and that TI tried to make the screen look big. The keys take a lot of pressure to hit. The screen has higher contrast, but it is still 64*96 to keep TI-83 Plus compatibility. It appears limited, but is really powerful when you know how to use it.

Speed: *****
It's a Z80 with 16MHz.
Graphics: ***
Remember, it's not a laptop.
Features: ****
Only good if you know it well.
Ease of use: *****
Turn it on, and you know what to do.
Gaming: ***
It's not an Alienware, but they are still fun.
Overall: ****
Only good for a TI-82/TI-73 user or a TI-83 (+) user who
needs the USB.
My TI-85 and lost TI-83. This is the last and only picture of this TI-83.
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