<p>Hey, I'm doing the biological engineering major. What calculator is best? Do they allow ti89s?</p>
<p>I doubt it matter what you use, and it depends what you're using it for...I'd imagine they'd allow 83's and 89's, and probably just about anything else. Honestly though, I'm not sure, I don't no any bioeng majors.</p>
<p>Theres already a big post on this somewhere. TI89 is best, but I dunno what they allow</p>
<p>Anybody else have the TI89 Titanium? That thing is amazing! :)</p>
<p>Yeah, great caclulator...i prefer the 83+ silver edition for most things, but the 89ti can do a lot more..</p>
<p>My TI-89 Titanium makes calculus easy.</p>
<p>cool, at least they allow you calculators. many MATH classes don't even allow a scientific calculator. gotta do all those derivatives by hand man...some ppl went in not even remembering how to add, subtract, multiply, divide b/c they were so dependent on the calculator. dunno about engineering math though. lucky sob if they do get to use calcs.</p>
<p>I was studying for my calc midterm today (calc A, B is next semester) and I didn't use a calculator once. It was sweet.</p>
<p>Yeah, I didn't use my calculator at all for AB. It just saves sooo much time in BC this year, I <3 it. lol</p>
<p>I'm gonna get an TI-89 Ti for the Calc B semster, and figure out how to do all the A stuff on it as I go through. It's a powerful machine, and worth knowing how to use.</p>
<p>Ive heard that a lot of kids go to college and don't get anything in calculus because their teachers haven't taught them the non-calculator stuff well... so make sure you guys learn derivatives, etc really well without the calc, even if the ti89 is awesome.</p>
<p>Our teacher doesn't let us use calcs! Not fair :(</p>