Museum of Pocket Calculating Devices

3 days ago (calculators.de)

My dream is to one day own a Curta. I want to find an algorithm to approximate pi, one crank at a time. I had a chance to hold one at a vintage computer festival once. Smaller than I expected. Truly pocketable.

I just had a thought. Why hasn't a Curta simulator come out for the Playdate? I guess I am cursed with creating it

I have 2 listed: HP-35 and HP-41CX.

Still use an HP-11c.

Will die on that hill defending RPN!

What a horrible web site. I hit "reload", and I now have two copies of the LH Menu. In IFRAMEs. I was able to see a couple of the items, then that broke. I click and nothing happens.

Some people just can't be trusted with HTML.

We had HP ones at school, lots of fun in math classes...

But then I still have my Casio FX-850P, which I probably own since 1989 or something. Last time I put batteries in it (5 years ago?) it was still working. It's in TFA : )

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casio_FX-850P

It's on my desk, always visible. Next to an Atari Portfolio (the same one young John Connor uses to hack doors in Terminator 2) and a totally beaten up ZX Spectrum. Remnants of a glorious past.

Cool page. I still have a working TI SR-51 from the early 70s, probably 74, maybe 75. Blew several hundred dollars on it, only to learn that the university I attended only allowed slide rules. So it goes. Despite the rather primitive red LED, it still works. Better than my slip stick actually. It's amazing the circuits that fail on a slide rule.

One category of calculator they're missing is "Food Based Calculator". Imagined the front panel of a calculator being made out of a Graham cracker.

As someone whoose first calculator was a basic Sharp (I think) 4 function model in 1975 - I admired the scientific calculators that others could afford, at that time. This site bought back memories of the early era calculators.

I have a few pocket computers not on that page. I guess I have a new option where to donate them if I ever decide to part with them.

I was really looking for watch calculators.

  • They have that on the page: https://www.calculators.de/

    Although one omission I was hoping to see is slide rule watches. It's unfortunate that these days mechanical watches are just status symbols for rich people, because back in the day slide rule watches like the Chronomat and Navitimer were tools that people really needed for their job. Navy test pilots said their Navitimers were indispensable.

As the old joke goes:

"For your birthday, I wanted to get you a pocket calculator ... but then I thought you'd already know how many pockets you have."