Commodore scientific calculator app download






















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Stay informed about special deals, the latest products, events, and more from Microsoft Store. Available to United States residents. By clicking sign up, I agree that I would like information, tips, and offers about Microsoft Store and other Microsoft products and services. Privacy Statement. Scientific Calculator. See System Requirements. Available on Mobile device. Description Scientific Calculator contains two calculators, scientific and programmer, which provide 57 functions.

Show More. People also like. Bookmark Tiles Free Free. Spotify Free. QR Scanner Plus Free. There is an algebraic version of the MM6 too and there is a version with rectangular keys and one with oval keys. While producing the Minuteman models, Commodore also was selling a parallel series, the US series, which contains some unique designs.

At this point late early , calculator history reached a turning point. These were all slender, stylish, lightweight models perhaps patterned after the Sinclair Cambridge, which had just come on the market. The Sinclair influence may not be too far-fetched, as many of these Commodore products were made in England and used the CBM name.

They came in a variety of neutral shades, but mostly tan. The most advanced model is perhaps the , which has niceties like square and pi. Commodore assimilated this trend, too, by creating an entire series based on it: the Green Line GL series. A rarer variation of the GL line is the "9" series, such as the 9R31 or 9D31 a "D" in Commodore vocabulary means "disposable batteries" ; this series may have been produced for the European market.

Unfortunately for collectors seeking mint examples, the GL calculators used a lot of painted-on silver trim which is almost always worn off to some extent. Commodore stayed out of the market for sophisticated scientific and financial models while HP and TI battled for control of that niche. In characteristic fashion, when Commodore did decide to produce super-calculators, they did so aggressively, eventually taking the genre to its extreme.

Their first scientific model, appearing in late , seems to be the SR, which introduced nomenclature that Commodore used for most of these models: "SR" prefix indicates a scientific model, "F" indicates a financial. This calculator, which came in two faceplate variations black plastic or the rarer silver metal devotes one key to a function, so we are faced with nearly 40 keys. This abundance of keys and functions became a trademark of Commodore's advanced models. Mention should be made at this point of one of Commodore's more unusual models: SR Also unusual are the dual-function keys with both functions printed on the key itself, one on a shiny gray background, the other on blue, giving the unit a singular appearance.

An anomaly, it's unknown to me whether it pre- or post-dates the SR Some of the more interesting scientific models include the SR, which has a fluorescent display and a stylized wedge-shaped case; the SRR, a well-constructed, heavy-duty model with 48 keys; and the SRR and its cousins , , and perhaps others , which have close to 50 keys, most with two functions, including some rather specialized ones such as metric conversions and unusual distributions the Poisson and Gaussian, for example.

These last models have approximately 90 functions, perhaps accounting for the model number. The earliest financial model appears to be the FR with 46 keys. Interestingly, the owner's manual features a picture of a minuteman on the cover perhaps someone could explain the rationale behind the minuteman nomenclature as it relates to calculators [Probably an allusion to the 'Minutemen' civilian militia of the American Revolutionary War who were known for being ready for action within a minute's notice.



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