Just got my 35s over the weekend. Two words: GET ONE!
Pictures don't do the 35s justice; it's really a good looking calculator. The plastic case is black, and the aluminum cover plate is a very dark brown, almost black. The lower half of the key pad, the enter and backspace keys and are black. The rest of the keys are a very dark grey. The color difference is so subtle it's hard to even notice. The blue and yellow functions stand out very clearly against the dark brown cover plate. The new zipping hard case is cool too. Much nicer than the cheesy looking slip case the 33s had.
HP definitely got the classic HP-high-quality look right on this one. It reminds me of the first time I saw a 32sII in the university bookstore. Sitting there next to comparable TI's, Sharps and Casios and at two to three times the price, something about the look of the HP justified the price.
The 35s reminds me of the 32sII. The key feel is very similar to my 48GX, though maybe slightly more clicking sound. Could be that my 48 is just worn out and has been 'clicked' out. All of the keys on the 35s are larger than the 48 keys. Once the word gets out about the 35s, I expect this calculator to put a real dent in the used HP calculator market.
I've said before that I like the 33s as a daily user, or maybe I should say liked. Quality-wise, the 35s is way better than the 33s, hands down, no question. The keys are softer and quieter than the 33s. The traditional keypad layout with the large enter key is very nice. The 35s is what the 33s should have been to begin with. The 33s got me through the PE, so I'll always have a soft spot in my heart for it, but the 35s is my new love.
The 35s carries over a few minor quirks of the 33s...but it's executed so beautifully, that those quirks don't really matter much. It would be nice to have a matte screen, more pixels for better digit quality and a larger decimal point, but that's all stuff I can live with.
There is one new aggrivating problem though. Really, really aggrivating! I like to have my display set to ALL rather than fixed, scientific or engineering notation. I don't think in E to some power and I don't like to see a bunch of place holder zeros. The problem, which I think someone has already mentioned, is that when you have a long answer (like sin25 = 0.422618261741E-1), the exponent is not displayed on the screen; you have to scroll right to see the exponent. This about drove me crazy when I first got the calculator and was playing around with it. I've decided that the next best thing is fixed notation with 4 decimal places, which is the most I'll use for most things. Inexcusable, but I love the 35s enough that I'll just have to live with it. Crap!
The plastic packaging they ship the 35s in is bullet proof. Mere scissors are not enough to get into the package. I recommend tin snips or a circular saw. Me, I was so excited to get my hands on my new little black box I risked life and limb and used a razor sharp hunting knife to hack away at the packaging. I'd like to meet the shoplifter who inspired that kind of elaborately secure packaging. Seems like lawsuit material to me.
While everyone might have their little gripes about what HP should have done with it, considering that HP has the burden of trying to produce a scientific calculator that is all things to all people, I think they did a pretty good job. IMHO that the 35s represents HP best effort in many years.