I found this guy used on shopgoodwill.com for about $20 USD a few months ago. It was on my list of calculators to procure, but the going rate of $130 USD for a new one was way out of my range. I was ecstatic to find one in such great shape for a low price!
This is an amazing calculator with some glaring issues that make it more of a mixed bag than it could have been.
This is the last calculator produced by TI with the OS that was originally designed for the TI-92, TI's first calculator with a built-in CAS. The fact that it was written for a device with a full QWERTY keyboard is glaringly obvious. The UI has been crammed into a standard graphing calculator form factor in such a way that some key combinations can't be silk-screened on the keypad. Base 10 log is Green Diamond + 7
, for example.
The other huge problem with it is the speed reflects when it was designed. This calculator was released in 2004, and has had no upgrades since. As such, it is ungodly slow to perform a lot of calculations. In most cases, it performs on par with the Casio fx-991EX, a calculator which costs 1/7 as much. Graphing speed is pretty close to the Casio CFX-9850G from the mid 90s. This thing is unbelievably slow compared to most currently available calculators.
On the other hand, with the software being as mature as it is, it is amazing. There are program packages for the TI-89 Titanium that have no rival on any other platform. EEPro and MEPro are both freely downloadable from TI and provide a suite of activities, functions, and references customized for electrical engineering and mechanical engineering, respectively.
I'm very happy with this machine, and it does get quite a bit of use in spite of its shortcomings.
I haven't really had the calculator long enough to really explore the other software that's out there for it, but the two that I mentioned are spectacular.
They're only the standard here in the US. Back in the 80s and 90s, HP marketed to engineers and professionals, TI to students. TI started dumping a lot of resources into creating educational materials for schools and offering really cheap calculators to them. Once they had established themselves as the dominant manufacturer, they decided to rest on their laurels. You don't use TI in the US because it is innovatice, but because you grew up with it and it is comfortable.