> Hardware and software that belongs to everyone. Waiting to be OSHWA certifie
> Hardware & Industrial Design All rights reserved. The hardware design, including but not limited to Are proprietary and the intellectual property of Juan Ramón. No commercial use or reproduction of the hardware is permitted without express authorization.
Same for software, the comparison table says MIT, other parts say GPL v3.
Also the whole concept of exam mode which is in any way effective seems contradictory with GPLv3. Any hardware means which would limit the ability to use modified version of software would violate GPLv3.
12 hours ago [-]
seanhunter 5 hours ago [-]
If you want a serious OSS calculator, a great choice is the Free42 project by Thomas Okken, which is a GPL-licensed project that is entirely compatible with the HP-42.
Not really a graphing calculator (although you can plot a bit) but is a proper old-school rpn scientific calculator with programming, numerical integration and solver, amazing complex number support etc, and has stood the test of time. All the things you would expect if you've used an HP-42 or similar.
NetMageSCW 2 hours ago [-]
And you can get hardware that runs Free42 from Swiss Micros (DM42).
ramon156 12 hours ago [-]
The first thing I noticed in the repo is a next config, which I couldn't fathom. I then realized this is the "marketing website" for the project.
Deploying a neo-vibey website for a calculator is a wild choice. On top of that, the first things (the buttons) dont work.
This does not spark the vibe I want. You either go full hacker-mode (and end up with a relatively nerdy website that is more about technicals and less about marketing), or you go full-on stakeholder-mode (you prioritize that your product is going to completely smash your competitor, making stakeholders feel FOMO).
I don't get it. At all.
mistercow 11 hours ago [-]
I'm pretty sure they just vibe coded the site in half an hour on a lark. High gloss without any real direction or intent behind it is the new "vanilla html page with no CSS file", or maybe less charitably, the new clip art.
And that's fine, right? Like people can do what they want. We're just going to get used to it.
altmanaltman 12 hours ago [-]
Even if we ignore that, having text like "Scroll to Deconstruct Architecture" and "Join the Resistance" on a calculator app is cringe
tosh 10 hours ago [-]
The photos in the readme are great but the files are huge, 3-5mb+ per file (in case anyone here is on limited data).
K0balt 10 hours ago [-]
I wonder it this could be easily ported to the TTGO esp32 deck? It’s fairly mature and a nice form factor.
dvh 13 hours ago [-]
"Construccion" link is broken. And where is schematic?
orphea 12 hours ago [-]
Hardware & Industrial Design
All rights reserved.
Are proprietary and the intellectual property of [...]
I think it's kind of funny given it looks like it's just an ESP32-S3 dev board, an LCD screen [1], and a keypad.
Also, what's up with all the junk in readme? The project structure, random stats, tables. How bloating readme should help?
upd: Okay, there is a tiny disclaimer that the project is vibe-coded.
https://github.com/El-EnderJ/NeoCalculator/blob/a7712be5c460...
> Hardware and software that belongs to everyone. Waiting to be OSHWA certifie
> Hardware & Industrial Design All rights reserved. The hardware design, including but not limited to Are proprietary and the intellectual property of Juan Ramón. No commercial use or reproduction of the hardware is permitted without express authorization.
Same for software, the comparison table says MIT, other parts say GPL v3.
Also the whole concept of exam mode which is in any way effective seems contradictory with GPLv3. Any hardware means which would limit the ability to use modified version of software would violate GPLv3.
https://thomasokken.com/free42/
Not really a graphing calculator (although you can plot a bit) but is a proper old-school rpn scientific calculator with programming, numerical integration and solver, amazing complex number support etc, and has stood the test of time. All the things you would expect if you've used an HP-42 or similar.
Deploying a neo-vibey website for a calculator is a wild choice. On top of that, the first things (the buttons) dont work.
This does not spark the vibe I want. You either go full hacker-mode (and end up with a relatively nerdy website that is more about technicals and less about marketing), or you go full-on stakeholder-mode (you prioritize that your product is going to completely smash your competitor, making stakeholders feel FOMO).
I don't get it. At all.
And that's fine, right? Like people can do what they want. We're just going to get used to it.
[1] This one? https://www.amazon.ca/Hosyond-Display-320x240-Compatible-Dev...