Texas Instruments Voyage 200
This little sucker is so much fun! And I haven’t *even* scratched the surface of what it can do.
On the evening I got it, I upgraded the OS, put in a Periodic Table, *and* a global 3D atlas! It was cake with the TI Device Browser software.
- [education.ti.com](http://education.ti.com)
- [ticalc.org](http://www.ticalc.org/)

This is the main menu, or the home menu.

A simple sine wave in split-screen 2D mode.

This is a formula to find the Force in Newtons using two values in Coulombs divided by the distance squared.

This is the Periodic Table I mentioned earlier, but in Super Compact Mode so that the entire table is displayed. There is a better mode where half of the table is displayed, with the element symbols. Each element is loaded with info.
I downloaded this from the [ticalc .org archives](http://www.ticalc.org/pub/v200/) and put it on the calculator using the USB cable plus TI’s software on [education .ti.com](http://education.ti.com/). It’s written by Eric Marion and Jakub Poznanski of Gamdwellerz. It seems these guys have written a lot. I’ve only begun my quest!

This is the world globe software I mentioned earlier. I found it in the [ticalc.org archives](http://www.ticalc.org/pub/v200/). Putting it in the calculator was easy: drag and drop. Done. You can pan around and zoom in to a pretty good level of detail (vector maps only) with quite a few titles.
More to come as I continue to discover.
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