Support

Forums

Contact Me

HP calculator museum: HP 38G student graphic calculator, 1995

hp38gGraphingCalculator

The HP 38G is a graphing calculator for high-school math and science teachers and students. Introduced in 1995 at $79.95, it supports aplets, small applications that can be developed as part of the curriculum and can be easily distributed from the teacher's calculator to the students'. Using aplets, all the students in the classroom can have their calculators programmed identically at the beginning of a lesson. Equations are entered using algebraic format rather than the Reverse Polish Notation (RPN) used by most HP calculators. (RPN is a system for representing mathematical expressions without the use of parentheses.) from HP Museum

I was seeing this calculator when I was at engineer school, but was using a better HP48GX at that time

Bough for 1€ on a flea market!

Some more pictures

hp38gGraphingCalculator_01

And back

hp38gGraphingCalculator_02

Visit also HP Museum and HPcalc.org section for HP38G for Documentation, Games, Math Aplets, Miscellaneous Applications, Programming Tools, Science Aplets, Utilities

You might also like:
HP calculator museum: Hewlett Packard HP 40G Graphing Calcul
574 days ago
HP calculator museum: Hewlett Packard HP 40G Graphing Calcul
The HP-40G is an algebraic entry only graphing calculator from HP. Based on the HP-38G design, num
HP calculator museum: HP 49g Graphing Calculator
656 days ago
HP calculator museum: HP 49g Graphing Calculator
I recently added a HP 49g to my collection of HP calculators (Price paid: 3 euro). This model is n
HP calculator museum: HP 10BII Business Calculator
674 days ago
HP calculator museum: HP 10BII Business Calculator
With the HP 10bII you now have the power to keep up with all your growing course-load, small busin
HP calculator museum: HP 50g Graphing Calculator
674 days ago
HP calculator museum: HP 50g Graphing Calculator
The ultimate graphing calculator for surveying, engineering, math and science professionals and st
blog comments powered by Disqus

Donations

Thank You for supporting my work