My new Casio PRIZM just arrived and I decided to make a video of it, since I couldn't find any video showing the actual calculator in action on Youtube) Like the FX-9860GII, this new calculator features a backlight and like the 1996 CFX-9850G series (which has been discontinued a long time ago) it also features a color screen, although it has 65536 colors instead of 4. The CPU is 29 MHz by default, there's 61 KB of user RAM available, 16 MB of archive. My only disappointment is that the BASIC language on it is slow for displaying stuff on the screen, even more than the 9860G. However there is a 3rd-party hack in the works at www.omnimaga.org that will enable the execution of custom add-ins and assembly language programs on the calculator. That said, the BASIC language has its benefits at least: Unlike the TI-Nspire, it is not as limited. The TI-Nspire did not even have display commands nor a key input command allowing the creation of complex programs. So for people who want to make BASIC games, you should have more freedom on the PRIZM than on the TI-Nspire and hopefully maybe some 3rd-party libraries will come out in the future.
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