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A simple arithmetic calculator was first included with Windows 1.0. [5]In Windows 3.0, a scientific mode was added, which included exponents and roots, logarithms, factorial-based functions, trigonometry (supports radian, degree and gradians angles), base conversions (2, 8, 10, 16), logic operations, statistical functions such as single variable statistics and linear regression.
Formula editor combined with embedded solver, graphs LaTeX, PDF, PNG No AxMath: Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Windows AxMath is an interactive WYSIWYG formula editor which has a scrollable symbol panel and supports semantic math input. PNG, JPG, GIF, TIFF, EMF, LaTeX No Aurora: Yes No No Yes No Yes No No Microsoft Office addon. Renders using TeX.
OpenOffice (LibreOffice) and MS Word documents to JATS: Typeset: provides automated set of converters for MS-Word to JATS XML. OxGarage: [21] can convert documents from various formats into "National Library of Medicine (NLM) DTD 3.0". meTypeset: meTypeset [22] "is a fork of the OxGarage stack" "to convert from Microsoft Word .docx format to ...
The first season voice of Robot Jones was created with a Microsoft Word 98 text-to-speech function on a Macintosh computer. Beginning with the second season, Robot Jones's voice was dubbed over by child actor Bobby Block, and reruns of the first season were re-dubbed with Block's voice overs.
Mitch Gitman of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reviewed Carmen Sandiego's Great Chase Through Time, together with Carmen Sandiego Math Detective and Carmen Sandiego Word Detective, and said Time was the "smartest creative move [out] of the three new products", and that "the production value, with cinematic music and quality animation" makes Time ...
Living Books experimenting with 'living' text, where children could tap on any word and hear it pronounced or build the whole sentence word by word. [72] Schlichting chose to highlight the text because he "found kids follow anything that moves...we could get them to follow the reading if that was the only thing on the screen that was moving". [17]
The tilde was part of Microsoft's filename mangling scheme when it extended the FAT file system standard to support long filenames for Microsoft Windows. Programs written prior to this development could only access filenames in the so-called 8.3 format —the filenames consisted of a maximum of eight characters from a restricted character set ...