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Evolution of Calculators: A Visual History

This document provides a visual history of calculating machines from 1623 to 2010 through brief summaries of notable calculating firsts. It describes the evolution of calculating devices from the first adding machine invented by Wilhelm Schickard in 1623, to the first commercially produced mechanical calculator called the Arithmometer in 1820, to modern innovations like the first handheld programmable calculator by Hewlett-Packard in 1974 and the first color graphing calculator by Casio in 2010. The document highlights the important role of various inventors and companies in advancing calculator technology over time.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
217 views7 pages

Evolution of Calculators: A Visual History

This document provides a visual history of calculating machines from 1623 to 2010 through brief summaries of notable calculating firsts. It describes the evolution of calculating devices from the first adding machine invented by Wilhelm Schickard in 1623, to the first commercially produced mechanical calculator called the Arithmometer in 1820, to modern innovations like the first handheld programmable calculator by Hewlett-Packard in 1974 and the first color graphing calculator by Casio in 2010. The document highlights the important role of various inventors and companies in advancing calculator technology over time.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Calculating Firsts: A Visual History of

Calculators
Take a look at how calculating machines have evolved over
the years.
There once was a time when written numbers did not exist. Man had only his fingers and toes to
use as counting devices and counting sheep and crops using fingers, toes, rocks and shells will
get you only so far.
So human civilization invented the abacus, which the Computer History Museum suggests is
the oldest continuously used calculating tool aside from fingers.
Though still in use in today, the abacus was merely the beginning of mankinds interest in
calculating machines, which have evolved radically over the years. Here we share with you a
visual history of some notable calculating firsts.
1623: First Adding Machine

Photo Credit: History-Computer
Device Name: Calculating Clock
Inventor: Wilhelm Schickard
A Brief History: According to the History of Computers website, Wilhelm Schickard was
credited with inventing the first adding machine after Dr. Franz Hammer, a biographer of
Johannes Kepler, claimed that drawings of a calculating clock had been discovered in two letters
written by Schickard to Johannes Kepler in 1623 and 1624. Prior to this discovery, Blaise Pascal,
who developed the Pascaline adding machine in 1642, was regarded as the inventor of the first
adding machine.
Schickards Calculating Clock is composed of a multiplying device, a mechanism for
recording intermediate results, and a 6-digit decimal adding device.
Interesting Fact: The letters Schickard wrote Kepler were written in Latin, the international
language of science and scholarship in Central and Western Europe until the 17th century.
1773: First Functional Calculator

Photo Credit: History-Computer
Device Name: n/a
Inventor: Philip Matthus Hahn
A Brief History: Hahn aspired to design a machine that would help him calculate the parameters
of the clocks and planetariums he enjoyed making, according to the History of Computers
website. He based his calculator on the Stepped Reckoner calculating machine that was
developed by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz in 1672. Hahns calculator featured a set of twelve
drums in a circular arrangement that could be activated by a crank located in the axis of the
drums.
Interesting Fact: Although the first working copy of the device was ready in 1773, the
calculator was not demonstrated until 1778 because of Hahns difficulty with the reliability of
machines tens-carrying mechanism.
1820: First Commercially Produced Mechanical Calculator

Photo Credit: Cornell
Device Name: Arithmometer
Inventor: Charles Xavier Thomas de Colmar
A Brief History: The arithmometer was the first commercially successful calculating machine to
complete all four basic operations addition, subtraction, multiplication and division
according to IBM. Like Hahn, Thomas also based his calculator on the stepped drum mechanism
of Leibniz. The machine featured a second result display for subtraction and division as well as a
multiplication gear.
Interesting Fact: The production debut of the Arithmometer in 1851 launched the mechanical
calculator industry. The Arithmometer was the only type of mechanical calculator
commercialized from 1878 to 1887 worldwide, and was still in use up to World War I.
1954: First All-Transistor Calculator

Photo Credit: IBM
Device Name: IBM 608
Inventor: IBM
A Brief History: The IBM 608 was the first calculating machine to use solid-state transistors
instead of vacuum tubes. The machine was housed in several large cabinets. According to the
companys website, customers could purchase the machine for $83, 210 (or rent it for $1,760 a
month). The machines main memory could store 40 nine-digit numbers and could perform
4,500 additions per second, among other operations.
Interesting Fact: The IBM 608 contained more than 3,000 germanium transistors.
1961: First All-Electronic Desktop Calculator

Photo Credit: Anita-Calculators
Device Name: ANITA MK-8
Inventor: Bell Punch
A Brief History: In 1956, the Bell Punch Co. of Great Britain set out to diversify from
manufacturing ticket punches by producing a commercial electronic desktop calculator
codenamed the ANITA. According to the Vintage Calculators Web Museum, the vacuum tube
based calculator was released in 1961 under the name ANITA MK-8. The machine featured
approximately 170 cold cathode vacuum tubes, a Dekatron decade counter tube and Numicator
display/indicator tubes.
Interesting Fact: The acronym ANITA was intended only for internal use during the
development of the machine, but the name was so ingrained by the time the calculator was ready
for production that the company stuck with it. The acronym has been said to stand for A New
Inspiration to Accounting or A New Inspiration to Arithmetic, but rumor has it that its also
the name of the designers wife.
1967: First Handheld Calculator

Photo Credit: Heinz Nixdorf Forum
Device Name: Cal Tech
Inventor: Texas Instruments (TI)
A Brief History: According to the Texas Instruments website, Cal Tech was the codename
used for the device during its development, which was released commercially in 1970. The 45-
ounce calculator featured a small keyboard with 18 keys and a visual output that displayed up to
12 decimal digits.
Interesting Fact: The original 1967 prototype of the device can be found in the Smithsonian
Institutions National Museum of American History.
1971: First Truly Pocket-Sized Electronic Calculator to use LED Display

Photo Credit: Computer History
Device Name: Busicom LE-120A HANDY
Inventor: Busicom
A Brief History: The Busicom LE-120A, known as the HANDY, is the first handheld calculator
to use a calculator on a chip integrated circuit. According to the Vintage Calculators Web
Museum, the calculator featured a 12-digit display in red LED and cost $395 when it first went
on sale in January 1971. Because the calculator was so expensive, it came with a wrist strap
attached at its base to protect it from being dropped.
Interesting Fact: According to the Vintage Calculators Web Museum, Aristotle Onassis, the
Greek shipping magnate, gave the expensive calculators as gifts to friends.
1974: First Handheld Programmable Calculator

Photo Credit: HP Museum
Device Name: HP-65
Inventor: Hewlett-Packard
A Brief History: First introduced by Hewlett-Packard as a Personal Computer, the calculator
allowed users to either buy programs on pre-programmed cards or write programs up to 100 lines
long and record them on blank cards. The device featured user-definable keys (with 35 keys
controlling more than 80 operations) and was the first HP pocket calculator with base
conversions (octal and decimal). The calculator cost $795 when it launched in 1974. In 1975,
during the first joint U.S.-Soviet space flight, it became the first handheld calculator in outer
space.
Interesting Fact: Bill Hewlett specified in the design requirements that the calculator had to fit
in his shirt pocket one reason for the machines tapered shape.
1985: First Graphing Calculator

Photo Credit: Datamath
Device Name: Casio fx-7000G
Inventor: Casio
A Brief History: The Casio fx-7000G was developed with 422 bytes of memory and could store
up to ten programs in 10 program slots, according to the Computing History website. It offered
82 scientific functions, and its display could toggle between 8 lines of 16 characters each or a
64x96 dot matrix graphical display.
Interesting Fact: Todays graphing calculators like the TI-83 kept the fx-7000Gs display
format.
2003: First Graphing Calculator with Touch Functionality

Photo Credit: Gumtree
Device Name: Sharp EL-9650
Inventor: Sharp
A Brief History: When most people think of touch devices, they think of using their fingers, but
Sharp broke the mold by debuting the first stylus-based graphing calculator, according to Tech
Powered Math. Sharp, unfortunately, didnt find much success with the model.
Interesting Fact: The EL-9650 had a slideshow functionality that allowed teachers to walk
through pre-programmed lessons and formulas on the calculator.
2010: First Color Graphing Calculator

Photo Credit: Casio
Device Name: Casio PRIZM
Inventor: Casio
A Brief History: While the world of mobile devices quickly moved to full-color screens in the
early 2000s, it took a while for graphing calculators to catch up. Casios PRIZM calculator, with
its advanced, 216x384 resolution, full-color display, debuted in late 2010. Texas Instruments
soon followed with its own color calculator, the TI-NSpire Cx, in early 2011. Students could
finally bid good-bye to the monochrome, low-pixel displays of years past.
Interesting Fact: The PRIZM allows students to create graphs over images, which helps them
understand the real-world applications of the work theyre doing on their graphing calculators.
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