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- From: rrd@hpfcso.FC.HP.COM (Ray Depew)
- Date: Tue, 25 Aug 1992 15:16:14 GMT
- Subject: Re: An old Commodore calculator
- Message-ID: <7360166@hpfcso.FC.HP.COM>
- Organization: Hewlett-Packard, Fort Collins, CO, USA
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!sdd.hp.com!hpscdc!hplextra!hpfcso!rrd
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.handhelds
- References: <1992Aug19.205435.11305@Princeton.EDU>
- Lines: 35
-
- In comp.sys.handhelds, woodhams@phoenix.Princeton.EDU (Michael Woodhams) writes:
-
- > ...
- > I hadn't even realised Commodore ever made calculators, or that they
- > existed as long ago as 1974. What did they do before making the PET?
-
- Before 1974, Commodore made adding machines. When everyone started making
- calculators, Commodore jumped on the bandwagon. So did Canon, National
- Semiconductor, HP, TI and a bunch of other big-names-you-would-be-surprised-
- to-hear and small-names-you-have-never-heard. Of course, in the early 70's
- a four-functio n machinue was nearly $100, and programmable machines costed
- more than your HP48. Then, in the late 70's, calculators became a commodity
- item. Prices fell through the floor. National Semiconductor even had a
- $10 "disposable" one (batteries couldn't be replaced) in stores like Walmart.
-
- The drastic drop in prices was followed by an industry shakeout, and many
- companies either dropped out of the calculator market or dropped out of sight.
- Commodore Business Machines were smart enough to see the shakeout coming, and
- they had already adopted a plan to JUMP, NOT BRANCH, from calculators
- to personal computers.
-
- The history books will show that CBM were indeed successful in making the
- transition. The PET, the VIC-20 and the C-64 family were important parts
- of the birth and evolution of personal computing.
-
- I think that Commodore made electric typewriters too, but I'm not sure. I
- used a Smith-Corona back then.
-
-
- Regards
- Ray Depew
- Hewlett Packard Co, Fort Collins, Colorado
- rrd@hpfiqa.fc.hp.com
- Disclaimer: I obviously don't work for Commodore, but I did borrow a
- brand-new Commodore calculator for a math test, once.
-