ti-84 Plus Ce Color Graphing Calculator
$62.99
$115
45% off
Reference Price
Condition: New
Color: Black
Size: 7.5 Inch
Top positive review
8 people found this helpful
Nice edition of an old classic
By Claudio Puviani on Reviewed in the United States on April 30, 2025
Is it the best graphing calculator out there? Not by a long shot! In fact, it's severely underpowered compared to the competition. But it has a few unique qualities. For us old timers, it's a spruced up edition of and old classic, the TI-83 Plus, which became popular because it runs on a Z80 processor (even if most people never took advantage of that). This popularity turned it into a de facto standard for students, teachers, and educational institutions. So if you're a student, this calculator is a safe bet. It will be accepted by teachers, even in most exams, and you'll have plenty of people around you who know it. In fact, some schools require this model. Ironically, the feature that propelled this calculator in the first place -- the ability to program it in Z80 machine language -- has been locked out by TI because it made it possible to cheat during exams. Even more ironically, this lock was soon broken, so they angered their customers for nothing. In place of the Z80, the newer models offer a trimmed down version of Python, as do most other graphing calculators today. While it occupies the low end of graphing calculators, in terms of speed and capabilities, it's still overpowered for just about anyone but those who do fairly advanced mathematics. Unless you're an engineer, physicist, or mathematician (or studying to become one), you won't come close to using all of the abilities of this calculator. But if you are an engineer, physicist, or mathematician, I would recommend an HP Prime G2, a TI-Nspire CX II CAS, or a Casio fx-CG50 PRIZM. All three are hugely faster, have more memory, and have CAS and better support for complex and exact math (on the Casio, the CAS is downloaded separately). If you need power, but are on a budget, the Casio fx-9750GIII is basically a black & white version of the fx-CG50, but at less than half the price of a TI-84 Plus CE. It's slower than the fx-CG50, but a lot faster than the TI-84 Plus CE.
Top critical review
Decente calculator with flawed batteries
By M. Martin on Reviewed in the United States on January 21, 2025
I purchase two of these calculators. The first one, a different color from different sellers, arrived as expected but failed to boot with the same "validating OS" message reported by many others. I had not paid attention to the seller but it was not Amazon, so I returned it the following day. The package condition made me question the authenticity of the product, so better safe than sorry. That being said, I purchased another one, purple this time (school colors but also sold by Amazon). Tried to power it up and it did the same exact thing. After researching the issue extensively, it became clear that the battery is the issue. So I rolled the dice and ordered a battery, received it, swapped it out and the thing booted right up. Anyone considering the TI 84 Plus CE calculator, there is a form from TI support to request a new battery for free, but it will take "5-7 business days." So, if you purchase the calculator and the same OS validation loop occurs, and you can afford the time to wait 5-7 more days for a replacement battery, it's still a good calculator. Or, you could always pay ~$12 for an additional battery. For what it's worth, I did have this calculator plugged in to charge for >12 hours but I don't think it will ever charge since it constantly reboots.
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