| ▲ | bluenose69 4 hours ago | |
They are doing this also for the science version, the 15C. I bought a 15C in the 1980s, and have enjoyed it ever since. It is like a rock. Despite being treated roughly over the years, nothing is wrong with it apart from some dents in the metal parts and my name, scratched on the back. I suppose I've replaced the batteries a couple of times, but that's it. This thing just refuses to die. The main thing is that the keys still work like on day 1. And I've never seen a calculator with keys like this, with such feedback that you never need to worry about double-presses or missed-presses. I just love the thing. If it died, I'd buy one of these new versions in a flash. But I think it will outlast me! | ||
| ▲ | fidotron 3 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |
> The main thing is that the keys still work like on day 1. And I've never seen a calculator with keys like this, with such feedback that you never need to worry about double-presses or missed-presses. This is also the thing I'm most suspicious of with all these retro remakes - it's the physical hardware aspects that get screwed up so often. If they get this right it would be legitimately surprising. | ||
| ▲ | JohnVanVliet 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |
i also love my 15c ,used it for many years now i also have 1 on my KDE desktop it works just fine in wayland an in x11 | ||
| ▲ | NetMageSCW 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
They released the 15C before a couple of times. | ||