Welcome to The Calculator Museum 2.0 Web Page - Rebooted
The purpose of this site is to preserve the history of electronic calculators by using the Internet to display information relating to the machines developed during the 1960s through mid-1970s.
From the sale of the first all-electronic desktop calculator in the early 1960s through the transition of calculators to commodity status in the mid-1970s, design of electronic calculators served as an important driver for engineering efforts that resulted in the acceleration of technology during a critical time in the electronics industry. Calculators were the first item that could be sold in large quantities that required development of Large-Scale Integrated Circuits for their success. The R&D efforts put into LSI chip development helped develop new processes & technology that found applications in many aspects of everyday life. The first microprocessor was developed originally as a calculator chip, which served as a springboard for an entire industry.
Unfortunately, because calculators became so commonplace in the 1980s, much of the information and many of the early machines themselves have been thrown away. It is our hope that by using the Internet to create The Calculator Museum Web Page, information about the development of and technology behind early calculators, as well as the machines themselves, can be preserved for the future.
The Desktop Calculator Gallery - Features electronic desktop calculators from 1963-1975, plus some interesting later models.
The HP Gallery - Features calculators manufactured by the Hewlett-Packard company, both pocket and desktop category machines.
The Pocket Calculator Gallery - Features pocket calculators from the early-mid 1970s of all types (basic, scientific, financial, etc.)