Miami - Nov 29 - UCALC 3.2 has just been released. It now
plots 3D surfaces, and comes with picturesque examples. It uses the
technique of hidden line removal, making 3D graphs visually appealing.
This adds a "fun factor" to a scientific calculator already known for
its many features that engineers, educators, students and scientists
currently rely on.
The Miami Herald featured UCALC and its author in an article with a
caption reading: "Calculator program really adds up". ZD Net -- the
online service for Ziff-Davis, which publishes leading computer
magazines -- gave UCALC the maximum 5-star rating, describing it as
"extremely powerful".
UCALC contains a sample file which demonstrates the kind of tasks
people use it for, such as financial calculations, unit conversions,
calculus integrations, equation solving, summations, and more.
A windows version currently under development is due soon. Users
wishing to check on its progress and offer suggestions can visit the
official UCALC web page listed below. Since the very first DOS version
several years ago, user input has been a great driving force behind the
the development of UCALC. The author is dedicated to continue making
UCALC the best scientific calculator for the computer.
UCALC 3.2 can be downloaded from the PC Magazine Editorial forum on
ZDNET (GO EDITORIAL), from John Dvorak's own file area (library 8,
UCAL.ZIP). Internet users can download it from the Ziff-Davis link
on my home page.
Contact:
Daniel Corbier [75541,1523] Dancorbier@aol.com Fax: 305-233-2604
Web page http://members.aol.com/Dancorbier/ucalc.html
--- Maximus 2.02
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* Origin: Telcom Central (1:135/23)
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