@Nathan Meyers and @William Wickes, thanks for your guys' work on the HP48 (as well as other folks). I still have my HP 48SX calculator and accessories from 1992 that purchased from my newspaper route income in high school. It played a large part in my path to my later career in Computer Science.
@Romero Regarding Droid48, the developer has dropped support for it. Consider switching to Emu48 For Android, which also has more features. If you stick with Droid48 and want to get data/programs _out_ of Droid48 to save or share, you can install my own companion app called "Droid48 Reader". However, because Droid48 support has been dropped, my own app received what will probably be its last update last year.
I studied the entire HP 48 SX calculator manual during 12th grade in 1992, as it was my first real calculator given to me as a gift by my father. I learned to use the calculator very well over the years in college, but many of the things in this video would have made my usage much more efficient. I still have the SX and GX with a bunch of expandable storage cards, and even the printer. It was the coolest calculator ever made and probably still is in many respects. I also have the entire line of HP 95 lx,100lx, and 200lx micro computers.
Cool collection, I am very lucky to get a almost brand new HP 48Gx on a garage sale, the owner just kept it in the bag for almost 30 years. Although it is so low than the modern calculators, I was still shocked by its versatility in consideration of being made in 1990s, love it so much
Wow... they don't make them like this anymore. Neither calculators, nor instructional videos. This rainy Sunday got out my old HP calculators and realized I completely forgot how they work after 20 years. Thanks for sharing this.
In my college we had an HP ambassador to give us course for intermediate and advance use of the calculators, 48 series, with a device that was an LCD screen for the overhead projector connected with the serial cable to his calculator, so we could see his screen. yes, best calculator ever, I tried the 49 & 50 series, just not the same, yes they were faster but the buttons were horrible. but now with smartphones we can even use Wolfram in the web and calculate on their clusters, it is expensive but we can get a ton of power on our modern "palmtops" or "handhelds"
I got my 48sx in 1990 for college; had a detour and 30 years later I'm back in school for EE to finish what I started. The 48sx is in class with me. Pretty sure it's older than most of the people I'm in class with these days. It's a little old and slow, and creaks a lot, but still gets the job done (just like me) :-) Still love it and wouldn't trade it for anything.
I wish you the best of luck @ your back to college journey… planning doing same thing next year at exact 30 years later also, back in 1994… I still have my HP48GX & HP49G up & running😅
I have my HP48 since 1990. Still I use it for my work every day. Some years ago, I needed some new battery contacts, because they were corroded. I contacted HP and asked for this spare part. I had not much hope to get it, because of the age. But... Some days later I got a letter from an HP facility in Tchechoslovakia. It contained a nice letter, stating that still many, many people use this calculator. 😂 And the spare part was included as well. No bill, no cost. HP is a brand! 😊
This is a really remarkable jewel of one of the greatest companies ever founded. Back in those times, they were still named „Hewlett Packard“ in full. I am still loving my HPCV/HP41CV. Today using a Swissmircos DM41X too🎉 Thank you very much for every hour you all spent on the HP41.
Thank you for making this video available. I had a 48sx in the ‘90s and used it a lot in my eng studies. We had the same model with a class mate. We developed and exchanged programs via IR. It was incredibly useful that time. Unfortunatlely the buttons dont work on it anymore. However a very nice iphone app called iHP48 has recently been released so I can enjoy again the good old hp48 experience. I came here to relearn the basics of programming.
I have found this video wildly useful for understanding my 48g and 50g. For years I just could not grok the paradigm of how to use these things. And the 48g manual is like reading the IRS tax code translated into Latin. But now I keep the 50g handy after watching most of this a few times.
Wow, so I have an HP 50g and I just saw the best Demo for this calculator, I didn't even know I could do this, and all of this still works on the 50g, WOW, thank you!!!!
Long live RPN! By now I am literally befuddled when faced with a non-RPN, non-stack calculator. The head of the engineering program at the Community College I attended made us buy 48's for Statics in 2002. They were about $120 in the college bookstore by then if I'm remembering correctly. Still using the 48GX I bought then, every day at work, and it is perfect! I don't do high level math on it anymore, but I can't believe my colleagues who use the Windows calculator instead of a handheld calculator. I made my own interface cable and managed to push one pin into the calculator body. I called HP customer support and they offered to send me a replacement! That impressed the heck out of me, and made me a loyal customer for as long as HP makes calculators. I just ordered my son a Prime G2; way overkill for high school, but should see him through college and beyond in a technical field. The replacement 48GX HP sent me sits at my computer desk at home.
I really liked the HP 48 SX. It's orange/blue keys and the Swap key were great! Early models had mechanical problems with the keypad. HP apologized and offered me their new 48GX at a preferential price. Which I assumed. But the purple/light blue color choice at GX was never mine. The 48SX key colors were epic. - Nice to hear that there are later 48SX models with a durable keyboard. :-)
Love this video. I used my HP 48SX for 20 years until one drop too many finally killed it. Still hooked on RPN. Started with the 32s in college, now enjoying the DM42. I hope they make a DM48 as it really was the prefect calculator.
@@bugs24b Oh yes, I remember the price... $349.99 before tax. (I bought it from the college bookstore, so I'm kinda surprised they didn't mark it up 72% like they did everything else in there.) I have the original receipt somewhere. That was a MOUNTAIN of money for me back then. I'm honestly surprised I even bought it.
@@keithmcfarland3819 ho yes it costed me at least 2 month of student job ;) here it was about 600$ ( with tax ) an i bought an " electric enggeenering card " lol ( we felt as wewhere Et's )
Thanks a lot for uploading this video! Amazing calculator! I have the HP-48G as hardware and the Emu48 program in my Android phone. This video was made with the 48SX and it is difficult to follow if you have the 48G (different menus and options available). Fortunately, I can configure the Emu48 program to work exactly as the 48SX and follow the video!!!
My mother being a maths teacher (yeah I know, lots of suffering) I always had Casio and I loved them. However I now discover all the things an old 48G I have in a drawer can do, and it looks insane!
This is a wonderful teaching video. Wish I had seen it back in the day. Around 1990 I was furiously devouring the manuals of my new HP28s and learned a lot as well. Good days :)
I think someone should create an HP48/49Emulator for Prime similar to Emu48 for Android. This video was nostalgic to view. For years I've found it relaxing to sit down with an HP48, hp49g+ or HP50g and create programs and libraries. I also like relaxing with an Android often using HP emulators.
Very usefull vídeo, I took again my 48S calculator and remembered old times, this calculator was fantastic and helped engineering and scientist society to grow. Thanks for sharing!,
Why this video was not uploaded when i started in engineering 😢. I have an 48g+ and it still a great calculator, is more reliable than an algebraic calculator.
@@edmund8954 Yes it does. The calculator is somewhat slow to run programs though. I recommend downloading the pdf manual and a emulator to test it before doing all the work on the device itself.
@@edmund8954 The lack of videos makes it hard, but old forums and sites like www.hpcalc.org/ have great resources to program in this series of calculator. Some of the HP50g programming works here as wel, if i not mistaken they use the same base language.
Cuando era estudiante de ingenieria, esta calculadora HP48G era lo maximo frente a los modelos de CASIO, resolvia todo, acompañado de un menu respetable de opciones que la HP PRIME no tiene a pesar de los años y que Hewlett Packard debio lanzar un producto realmente PRIME. la HP48G solo contaba con 32KB de memoria y la HP48GX podia ampliarse con una tarjeta hasta 128KB de memoria. Increible que con ese poco espacio se podian hacer maravillas de programacion en ingeniera quimica (mi profesion), calculos iterativos mediante programacion RPN que incluso podrias graficar automaticamente y darte los resultados que querias. Me emociono hasta las lagrimas por mi calculadora HP48G que me costo 100 USD pero valio la pena el gasto, pues en esa epoca no tenia dinero. Aun la conservo pero ya su pantalla esta fallando y busco cambiar su pantalla y eso ya no encuentro. Igual seguira conmigo hasta el final. Saludos desde Lima - Peru, January 2022
I wish I knew about this video when I was studying elec/eng back in the day , I had to learn how to use the calculator and my course, that was so hard work, the claculator is great and holds well to calc apps , using emulator code
I've got a few myself and sort of wore out the keyboards on some of them. At the time I got started I was chronically out of work and my HP48's and I spent a lot of time together. I wore out the keyboards and had to get new.
What an incredible tool !, powerful and funny. I don’t have my HP48GX anymore, it was a bad idea to sell it. I enjoyed this video, thank you very much. I could play with some ideas developed here on an iPhone Xs emulator “ihp48”, soo faster (PLOTs are instantaneous..!), I recommend it to you.
Just wondering, where could one get this video (I assume a VHS tape) back then? I bought two Hp48 (one s and one sx) and I definitely didn't get the tape, not do I remember seeing an option to get or buy the tape. And I read the manual back to back several times!
As a calculator, it is absolutely unbeatable. But it has/had some serious design flaws. For example, a very large number have been affected by contact errors, which cause buttons and the screen to stop working. I've had four of them and all of them have had contact failures. The glued-on metal plate has a tendency both to loosen and to become dented. Sticking on a metal plate of very soft/flexible metal, was a really bad idea. The calculator is assembled in a way that makes it completely impossible to open. Given all the contact errors it tends to suffer from, it would have been nice if it could be opened. But as I said, as a pure calculator it is completely unbeatable - as long as it works, that is.
Each time I watch this video, I feel as though I want to ask Mr. Wickes where the guy sits who designed the battery cover for the HP28. He and I need to talk.
@@kahuna1247 there is a solver app of course, but not as efficient as the solver of HP 48/49/50 which is using the soft keys! Big mistake, if you ask me. But the touch screen is a big plus on Prime. One cannot have it all I guess.
Yeah, and I wish the equation library was in the Prime too. I realize there is a user-made equation library, but it doesn’t support units like the 50/49/48g. That equation library was super handy as implemented on the older calcs for a working engineer. The unit conversions are not as efficient in the Prime either.
Thanks for the video. I got my 48SX during college year in 1991, one of the most interesting features is matrix to solve three unknown variable with three equations for circuit theory courses. My 48SX still work but the screen getting dimmer with "bleed" LCD , not sure if I should change its polarized/silver thin films or screen replacement from other models, like 39G, 40G, what is your thought ?
I bought a first HP calculator HP 25 back in 1975 in the first year of college. It is sad that HP will be no longer makes new calculators. HP is only company that makes RPN calculators.
I wish they would make a production run of the HP 41 and sell a math pack with it. Every hp calculator I have bought since is an over complicated mess.
This calculator came so tragically close to being the perfect marriage of RPN and Algebraic. All they needed to do was make the equation editor the default command line and make the ENTER key do what the EVAL key did. You could type a number followed by ENTER and it would push the number onto the stack as usual for RPN, or you could type an expression followed by ENTER and it would evaluate the expression and push the answer onto the stack as usual for algebraic but with automatic memory function. The multi-line stack display actually made RPN usable by mortals since you no longer had to keep the stack layout in your head as with the earlier single-line displays. The units system is a thing of beauty and I cannot understand why spreadsheets do not implement something similar today. Sadly, after this apex of the calculator story HP did RPN/Algebraic as a modal choice rather than something you could mix-and-match before dropping RPN altogether shortly before calculators finally died. It is worth checking out one of the emulators, and downloading the full user guide. These days you do not even have to pay extra for the top of the range GX!
Hp needs to make this for the prime. However, this value added training no longer exist for hp. Bummer. To interpalate for the hp prime would be a massive undertaking
The props he brings in are so pointless that they are funny... maybe that was the point. But then why the straight face all the time? I am missing something
Just learned that this found its way onto RUclips. Amazing how much hair I used to have :-).
I used to have a lot more hair as well!
Ditto!
@Nathan Meyers and @William Wickes, thanks for your guys' work on the HP48 (as well as other folks). I still have my HP 48SX calculator and accessories from 1992 that purchased from my newspaper route income in high school. It played a large part in my path to my later career in Computer Science.
@Romero Regarding Droid48, the developer has dropped support for it. Consider switching to Emu48 For Android, which also has more features.
If you stick with Droid48 and want to get data/programs _out_ of Droid48 to save or share, you can install my own companion app called "Droid48 Reader". However, because Droid48 support has been dropped, my own app received what will probably be its last update last year.
Me too XD. Well, I just powered on my HP48GX after 15 years. Still working LoL. Thanks Nathan!
I studied the entire HP 48 SX calculator manual during 12th grade in 1992, as it was my first real calculator given to me as a gift by my father. I learned to use the calculator very well over the years in college, but many of the things in this video would have made my usage much more efficient. I still have the SX and GX with a bunch of expandable storage cards, and even the printer. It was the coolest calculator ever made and probably still is in many respects. I also have the entire line of HP 95 lx,100lx, and 200lx micro computers.
Hot, you've got more stuff than I do!
Pretty cool palmtops those you have.
Cool collection, I am very lucky to get a almost brand new HP 48Gx on a garage sale, the owner just kept it in the bag for almost 30 years. Although it is so low than the modern calculators, I was still shocked by its versatility in consideration of being made in 1990s, love it so much
Wow... they don't make them like this anymore. Neither calculators, nor instructional videos. This rainy Sunday got out my old HP calculators and realized I completely forgot how they work after 20 years. Thanks for sharing this.
Nobody except HP made instructional videos like this in the 1990's either - it is more like something from the 1950's!
Me too! forgot almost everything, but still in good shape, the calculator not me....
In my college we had an HP ambassador to give us course for intermediate and advance use of the calculators, 48 series, with a device that was an LCD screen for the overhead projector connected with the serial cable to his calculator, so we could see his screen.
yes, best calculator ever, I tried the 49 & 50 series, just not the same, yes they were faster but the buttons were horrible.
but now with smartphones we can even use Wolfram in the web and calculate on their clusters, it is expensive but we can get a ton of power on our modern "palmtops" or "handhelds"
I managed to buy one of those overhead project displays for the HP48. It actually connects via one of the card slots, surprisingly.
I got my 48sx in 1990 for college; had a detour and 30 years later I'm back in school for EE to finish what I started. The 48sx is in class with me. Pretty sure it's older than most of the people I'm in class with these days. It's a little old and slow, and creaks a lot, but still gets the job done (just like me) :-) Still love it and wouldn't trade it for anything.
I wish you the best of luck @ your back to college journey… planning doing same thing next year at exact 30 years later also, back in 1994… I still have my HP48GX & HP49G up & running😅
6:42 I was almost expecting him to say "And please click subscribe and the bell notification icon in the lower right hand corner of your CRT TV."
Exactly :DDD
I have my HP48 since 1990. Still I use it for my work every day. Some years ago, I needed some new battery contacts, because they were corroded. I contacted HP and asked for this spare part. I had not much hope to get it, because of the age. But... Some days later I got a letter from an HP facility in Tchechoslovakia. It contained a nice letter, stating that still many, many people use this calculator. 😂 And the spare part was included as well. No bill, no cost. HP is a brand! 😊
This is a really remarkable jewel of one of the greatest companies ever founded. Back in those times, they were still named „Hewlett Packard“ in full. I am still loving my HPCV/HP41CV. Today using a Swissmircos DM41X too🎉 Thank you very much for every hour you all spent on the HP41.
One of the greatest handheld calculators ever. And by the way, the keyboard-layout is the best ever.
Thank you for making this video available. I had a 48sx in the ‘90s and used it a lot in my eng studies. We had the same model with a class mate. We developed and exchanged programs via IR. It was incredibly useful that time. Unfortunatlely the buttons dont work on it anymore. However a very nice iphone app called iHP48 has recently been released so I can enjoy again the good old hp48 experience. I came here to relearn the basics of programming.
I have found this video wildly useful for understanding my 48g and 50g. For years I just could not grok the paradigm of how to use these things. And the 48g manual is like reading the IRS tax code translated into Latin. But now I keep the 50g handy after watching most of this a few times.
I loved my HP-48SX. I got it for college in 1991. I wish I had access to this video back then to get more juice out of it.
Wow, so I have an HP 50g and I just saw the best Demo for this calculator, I didn't even know I could do this, and all of this still works on the 50g, WOW, thank you!!!!
Good to know. HP 50g is an amazing tool.
Long live RPN! By now I am literally befuddled when faced with a non-RPN, non-stack calculator. The head of the engineering program at the Community College I attended made us buy 48's for Statics in 2002. They were about $120 in the college bookstore by then if I'm remembering correctly. Still using the 48GX I bought then, every day at work, and it is perfect! I don't do high level math on it anymore, but I can't believe my colleagues who use the Windows calculator instead of a handheld calculator.
I made my own interface cable and managed to push one pin into the calculator body. I called HP customer support and they offered to send me a replacement! That impressed the heck out of me, and made me a loyal customer for as long as HP makes calculators. I just ordered my son a Prime G2; way overkill for high school, but should see him through college and beyond in a technical field. The replacement 48GX HP sent me sits at my computer desk at home.
Bought a second hand HP-48GX on the strength of this video. No regrets.
Where and when did you get it!?
I really liked the HP 48 SX. It's orange/blue keys and the Swap key were great! Early models had mechanical problems with the keypad. HP apologized and offered me their new 48GX at a preferential price. Which I assumed. But the purple/light blue color choice at GX was never mine. The 48SX key colors were epic. - Nice to hear that there are later 48SX models with a durable keyboard. :-)
Love this video. I used my HP 48SX for 20 years until one drop too many finally killed it. Still hooked on RPN. Started with the 32s in college, now enjoying the DM42. I hope they make a DM48 as it really was the prefect calculator.
I still have my 48sx and would use it but the LCD is gone bad. And 48 is nearly impossible to repair without breakin something.
29 years later, the 48G is still the best calculator I have ever owned. By a wide margin.
can you remember the price you paid for it ?
@@bugs24b Oh yes, I remember the price... $349.99 before tax. (I bought it from the college bookstore, so I'm kinda surprised they didn't mark it up 72% like they did everything else in there.) I have the original receipt somewhere. That was a MOUNTAIN of money for me back then. I'm honestly surprised I even bought it.
@@keithmcfarland3819 ho yes it costed me at least 2 month of student job ;) here it was about 600$ ( with tax ) an i bought an " electric enggeenering card " lol ( we felt as wewhere Et's )
Thanks a lot for uploading this video! Amazing calculator! I have the HP-48G as hardware and the Emu48 program in my Android phone. This video was made with the 48SX and it is difficult to follow if you have the 48G (different menus and options available). Fortunately, I can configure the Emu48 program to work exactly as the 48SX and follow the video!!!
I wish I had this video 30 years ago. Damn it.
My mother being a maths teacher (yeah I know, lots of suffering) I always had Casio and I loved them. However I now discover all the things an old 48G I have in a drawer can do, and it looks insane!
This is a wonderful teaching video. Wish I had seen it back in the day. Around 1990 I was furiously devouring the manuals of my new HP28s and learned a lot as well. Good days :)
thank you so much for posting this!
love this video, thanks!!!!! hp48g ... the best!
Thank God found somewhere on the internet to get the manual for an hp 48sx and Hp 48S
I think someone should create an HP48/49Emulator for Prime similar to Emu48 for Android. This video was nostalgic to view. For years I've found it relaxing to sit down with an HP48, hp49g+ or HP50g and create programs and libraries. I also like relaxing with an Android often using HP emulators.
Very usefull vídeo, I took again my 48S calculator and remembered old times, this calculator was fantastic and helped engineering and scientist society to grow. Thanks for sharing!,
Fascinating commercial. Thank you !
Why this video was not uploaded when i started in engineering 😢. I have an 48g+ and it still a great calculator, is more reliable than an algebraic calculator.
does this calculator's programming have variables,whileloops and forloops?
@@edmund8954 Yes it does. The calculator is somewhat slow to run programs though. I recommend downloading the pdf manual and a emulator to test it before doing all the work on the device itself.
@@marcos.oliveira Ah I see, I can't find any videos of these calculators doing programs.
@@edmund8954 The lack of videos makes it hard, but old forums and sites like www.hpcalc.org/ have great resources to program in this series of calculator. Some of the HP50g programming works here as wel, if i not mistaken they use the same base language.
@@marcos.oliveira oh yeah,I'm looking at the 39g+,it's cheap like $25-35,hopefully same but different shell. or it's gonna get confusing.
Great! Thanks for uploading!
thank you for uploading this.
Fantastic !
Bought mine in 1991 and still using it today...the HP50 is $500!
My HP48SX will enjoy this video....
Thanks for keeping this alive.
that video brings back old memories, i had a 48GX when studying engineering, a great calculator, I still have it and still wokrs after nearly 30 years
Opening titles: "Introducing the fantastic HP 48!!!"
Duck: "QUACK-A-QUACK-A-QUAAAAACK!"
Cuando era estudiante de ingenieria, esta calculadora HP48G era lo maximo frente a los modelos de CASIO, resolvia todo, acompañado de un menu respetable de opciones que la HP PRIME no tiene a pesar de los años y que Hewlett Packard debio lanzar un producto realmente PRIME. la HP48G solo contaba con 32KB de memoria y la HP48GX podia ampliarse con una tarjeta hasta 128KB de memoria. Increible que con ese poco espacio se podian hacer maravillas de programacion en ingeniera quimica (mi profesion), calculos iterativos mediante programacion RPN que incluso podrias graficar automaticamente y darte los resultados que querias. Me emociono hasta las lagrimas por mi calculadora HP48G que me costo 100 USD pero valio la pena el gasto, pues en esa epoca no tenia dinero. Aun la conservo pero ya su pantalla esta fallando y busco cambiar su pantalla y eso ya no encuentro. Igual seguira conmigo hasta el final. Saludos desde Lima - Peru, January 2022
BOUGHT THIS IN 1993. this calculator was amazing. NOTHING came close to it. RPN is the best way to use a calculator.
excelente, gracias
I wish I knew about this video when I was studying elec/eng back in the day , I had to learn how to use the calculator and my course, that was so hard work, the claculator is great and holds well to calc apps , using emulator code
0:47 The computer behind that guy, the kind of computer they used to design the HP 48, was probably 10-15 times less powerful than an HP Prime.
I love HP Calculator , I have about 10 different HP including 48G+ and HP50, HP32SII, HP41CX etc
I've got a few myself and sort of wore out the keyboards on some of them. At the time I got started I was chronically out of work and my HP48's and I spent a lot of time together. I wore out the keyboards and had to get new.
great video thanks HP - RPN is the best way to calculate - HP41CX first calculator and I loved it
Does your HP41CX still work
@@donaldweerheim738 yes it works well and I also have a card reader that works also
What an incredible tool !, powerful and funny. I don’t have my HP48GX anymore, it was a bad idea to sell it. I enjoyed this video, thank you very much. I could play with some ideas developed here on an iPhone Xs emulator “ihp48”, soo faster (PLOTs are instantaneous..!), I recommend it to you.
I didn't know there was any iOS emulator. I have imagined creating a super HP 50 that used HP50 logic but had more resolution, a backlight and speed.
Just wondering, where could one get this video (I assume a VHS tape) back then? I bought two Hp48 (one s and one sx) and I definitely didn't get the tape, not do I remember seeing an option to get or buy the tape. And I read the manual back to back several times!
I don't know about back in the day, but I got it off of eBay recently.
... and it was a VHS tape (just to confirm).
@@Lathe26Real well that's amazing!
Excellent upload!
This is gold!
Calculadora fantástica. Pena que não fabrica mais no Brasil
As a calculator, it is absolutely unbeatable. But it has/had some serious design flaws.
For example, a very large number have been affected by contact errors, which cause buttons and the screen to stop working. I've had four of them and all of them have had contact failures.
The glued-on metal plate has a tendency both to loosen and to become dented. Sticking on a metal plate of very soft/flexible metal, was a really bad idea.
The calculator is assembled in a way that makes it completely impossible to open. Given all the contact errors it tends to suffer from, it would have been nice if it could be opened.
But as I said, as a pure calculator it is completely unbeatable - as long as it works, that is.
Each time I watch this video, I feel as though I want to ask Mr. Wickes where the guy sits who designed the battery cover for the HP28. He and I need to talk.
HP probably fired the battery cover guy, who was then hired by TI to design the infamous TI-81 battery cover.
Great video
I would still be trying to pass Fluid Mechanics if I did not have this machine!
I wish we could have the Solver in HP Prime!
Huh? No Solver in HP Prime? HP50g user here.
@@kahuna1247 there is a solver app of course, but not as efficient as the solver of HP 48/49/50 which is using the soft keys! Big mistake, if you ask me. But the touch screen is a big plus on Prime. One cannot have it all I guess.
Yeah, and I wish the equation library was in the Prime too. I realize there is a user-made equation library, but it doesn’t support units like the 50/49/48g. That equation library was super handy as implemented on the older calcs for a working engineer. The unit conversions are not as efficient in the Prime either.
Despite the charming 90’s cheese, this is such a great video. They really don’t make them like they used to.
Great video!
It would be great if HP made it a video like this for the Prime
awesome!
I wish hp still made calculators like they used to
ok i want to buy one of these now
Deligintly, Aptly great calculator.......
Thanks for the video.
I got my 48SX during college year in 1991, one of the most interesting features is matrix to solve three unknown variable with three equations for circuit theory courses.
My 48SX still work but the screen getting dimmer with "bleed" LCD , not sure if I should change its polarized/silver thin films or screen replacement from other models, like 39G, 40G, what is your thought ?
Thanks...
[L-S] SOLVE ROOT is not well documented on the HP48S
Concrete for only $46 per yard? Just how old *is* this video?
Is there a video like this for prior calculators like the HP 42, 41 or 28?
I bought a first HP calculator HP 25 back in 1975 in the first year of college. It is sad that HP will be no longer makes new calculators. HP is only company that makes RPN calculators.
Allow me to introduce to you, SwissMicros!
I wish they would make a production run of the HP 41 and sell a math pack with it. Every hp calculator I have bought since is an over complicated mess.
Buy the 41x from swiss micros. It runs the original hp41c code.
la mejor y ya 🤗
A calculator for engineers, designed by engineers... built to last forever. I still have my 48g+, and it is as pretty as the first day I saw it.
I don't know how to turn off the sound nor to even turn it off
Lovely
I spent hours with my 48G, lost the serial cable, had it attached to my old pc and just threw it away
I don't have the menu labeles displayed does anyone know how can I display them? please
I recommend asking HP-48 technical questions on the forums at hpmuseum.org at www.hpmuseum.org/forum/forum-4.html
Set flag 117.
This calculator came so tragically close to being the perfect marriage of RPN and Algebraic. All they needed to do was make the equation editor the default command line and make the ENTER key do what the EVAL key did. You could type a number followed by ENTER and it would push the number onto the stack as usual for RPN, or you could type an expression followed by ENTER and it would evaluate the expression and push the answer onto the stack as usual for algebraic but with automatic memory function.
The multi-line stack display actually made RPN usable by mortals since you no longer had to keep the stack layout in your head as with the earlier single-line displays. The units system is a thing of beauty and I cannot understand why spreadsheets do not implement something similar today.
Sadly, after this apex of the calculator story HP did RPN/Algebraic as a modal choice rather than something you could mix-and-match before dropping RPN altogether shortly before calculators finally died.
It is worth checking out one of the emulators, and downloading the full user guide. These days you do not even have to pay extra for the top of the range GX!
y aurait pas un mode de qualité de 720p
Hp needs to make this for the prime. However, this value added training no longer exist for hp. Bummer. To interpalate for the hp prime would be a massive undertaking
One thing I loved about the HP48 and hp49 is so many people got into the act of creating software for it and posting it
Still my daily driver.
Could you make same for Casio 4500pa?
Is there a website where this video can be downloaded for offline use?
The video available on Archive.org at archive.org/details/learning-about-the-hp-48
@@Lathe26Real Thank You.
@@Lathe26Real
I bookmarked it.
I don't dare upvote when the number is 314. ;)
I have a HP48GX NEW IN the Package. Who wants it?
pipe this thru AI resolution enhance & re-upload this bad-boy
closeup to duck: welcome to HP
Yeah, I was wondering what the hell was up with that; first thing you see in a high-tech promo video is a duck!?
Let me guess this has to be a new YTP source
resolution is very low........
The calculator's resolution is 131 x 64 pixels.
... but all joking aside, this is from an old VHS tape. It's hard to make it look better than it currently is.
@@Lathe26Real l understand
The props he brings in are so pointless that they are funny... maybe that was the point. But then why the straight face all the time? I am missing something
Engineer humor is dry
I think the ice cream cone is the best. It's so, then from nowhere a giant cone. :D