In the engineering community, HP always dominated throughout the 70s, 80s and 90s, even with the steeper price. The quality of those calculators was outstanding. Brian KB1VBF http://home.comcast.net/~b.denley/index.html ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jennifer Usher" <jennisuzan@...> To: <50g@yahoogroups.com> Sent: Thursday, April 28, 2011 7:04 PM Subject: Re: [50g] what happed? Years ago, around 1986 to be exact, one of my college professors said that TI had won the interface war, that algebraic was more popular than RPN. But, I pointed out at the time that people were still willing to pay considerably more for an HP than a TI. No longer quite as true...but that the time, TI had nothing that could touch the HP. Jennifer On Apr 24, 2011, at 5:40 PM, Alan Golightly wrote: > > IMO the HP50g is a very powerful calculator. But extremely user > unfriendly. My favorite is still my HP15C; simple, yet powerful. > I think TI cornered the academic market; too bad so many people missing > out on RPN. It would be nice if HP put some effort into their calculators > and do what Joe said to improve the HP50g to modern standards. > > From: Brian Denley <b.denley@...> > To: 50g@yahoogroups.com > Sent: Sunday, April 24, 2011 12:34 PM > Subject: Re: [50g] what happed? > > > Joe: > Also the OS is still the same as the one in my HP-28S from 1986! Brilliant > for it's day but HP should have continued and developed a MathCad type GUI > with a PC application sync (may be to Mathcad). I think students and > professionals migth have adopted it as a standard. Way too late now! > Brian > http://home.comcast.net/~b.denley/index.html > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Joseph Colannino" <joecolannino@...> > To: <50g@yahoogroups.com> > Sent: Sunday, April 24, 2011 12:24 AM > Subject: Re: [50g] what happed? > > > The problem with the 50G was the change in the position of the enter > > key. > > HP blew it with the change and underestimated customer resistance to it. > > Microsoft committed the same faux pas when it rearranged the Excel user > > interface. For the same reason, the qwerty keyboard remains popular > > despite > > its shortcomings. This lesson has been repeated so often that you would > > think HP would have figured it out. But it didn't, and the 50G has > > declined > > in popularity because of it. > > > > Joe > > > > >
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Re: [50g] what happed?
2011-04-29 by Brian Denley
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