I think we can all agree that, as tested, the product was pretty worthless.
What we're all speculating about, however, is what PTC actually intends to release. I have _such_ a hard time believing that PTC would release such an underperforming product that I can only imagine we were providing feedback on an intermediate step along the path of designing a new interface.
I don't yet have enough experience with PTC to guess at what they'll do from here. I'm hoping that with the feedback they received from the beta test they'll go back and tweak what we suggested as part of the process of re-integrating programming and (I hope) symbolics.
If, however, they release a duct-taped version of what we just saw then I would judge their credibility to be near-zero. Who could possibly expect to have a viable mathematical product with functionality less than[*] a mid/upper range handheld calculator, while coupled to a publishing interface that, frankly, doesn't well lend itself to publishing?
- Guy
[*] The _first_ graphing calculator I looked at online had not only a large library of functions and the ability to graph equations, but also programming and a computer algebra system for symbolics!
http://h10010.www1.hp.com/wwpc/us/en/sm/WF05a/215348-215348-64232-30821-215351-384712.html