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TI-81

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Graphing calculator produced by Texas Instruments
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TI-81
A 1994 TI-81 showing graphs
TypeGraphing calculator
ManufacturerTexas Instruments
Introduced1990
Discontinued1997[1]
SuccessorTI-82
Calculator
Entry modeD.A.L.
Precision13 digits
Display size96×64 pixels, 16×8 characters
CPU
ProcessorZilog Z80
Frequency5 MHz or 6 MHz[2]
Programming
Programming language(s)TI-BASIC,Assembly
User memory2400 bytes ofRAM
Other
Power supply4AAAs,
1CR1616 orCR1620
Weight168 grams (5.9 oz)
Dimensions173 mm × 79 mm × 22 mm (6.8 in × 3.1 in × 0.85 in)

TheTI-81 was the firstgraphing calculator made byTexas Instruments. It was designed in 1990 for use inalgebra andpre-calculus courses. Since its release, it has been superseded by a series of newer calculators; most of these are functionally similar to the TI-81, with the exception of theTI-Nspire series.

Features

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The TI-81 is powered by aZilog Z80microprocessor, like those used in most other Texas Instruments graphing calculators. However, its processor is clocked at 2 MHz, whereas the others run at a frequency of either 6 or 15 Mhz. It has 2.4 KB of user-accessibleRAM, with additional RAM being allocated to the calculator's internal firmware.

The calculator uses Texas Instruments' own in-houseoperating system, theEquation Operating System; the firmware used by all other Texas Instruments graphing calculators derive from this. The TI-81 can perform two-dimensional parametric graphing—in addition to standard two-dimensional function graphing,trigonometric calculations in units of eitherdegrees orradians, simple drawing, the creation and manipulation of matrices up to a size of 6 by 6 pixels, and the execution of simple programs in a proprietary, statement-based language.[3]

In late 2009 an exploit was found that can be used to executemachine code on the TI-81, using manual input of code.[4] The TI-81 has no data link interface; its only means of input and output are the keyboard and screen.

Like most other Texas Instruments graphing calculators, the TI-81 is powered by fourAAA batteries and one button cellbackup battery; the backup battery makes sure that programs loaded in memory are persistent during battery changes. Some early TI-81 units omit the backup battery.[5]

Texas Instruments produced anemulator for the TI-81 and its Equation Operating System on a desktop computer; it is compatible withMS-DOS.[6]

See also

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References

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  1. ^Woerner, Joerg (2009-02-08)."DATAMATH: TI-81 (1995)". Retrieved2013-01-27.
  2. ^"TI-Planet's calculator comparison tool".TI-Planet.
  3. ^Christiansen, Brad; et al."TI-81 Guidebook"(PDF).Texas Instruments, Inc. pp. 8–9. Retrieved2021-02-04.
  4. ^Evans, Travis (2009-08-17)."User Machine Code Execution on TI-81 Becomes a Reality". Retrieved2013-01-27.
  5. ^Woerner, Joerg (2009-01-27)."DATAMATH: TI-81 Engineering Sample". Retrieved2012-02-04.
  6. ^"PC-81 on ticalc.org". 1998-04-28. Retrieved2012-02-04.

External links

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  • ticalc.org – The largest archive of TI programs available.
Z80-based graphing
M68k-based graphing
ARM-based graphing
Other graphing
Non-graphing programmable
Scientific models
Financial models
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