Accession No

4529.348


Brief Description

Vatman Mini Video LCD electronic desk-top calculator product number 1010A, by Decimo, Japanese, 1976 (c)


Origin

Japan


Maker

Decimo


Class

calculating; computer technology


Earliest Date

1976


Latest Date

1980


Inscription Date


Material

plastic; metal (steel)


Dimensions

Length 218mm; width 117mm; thickness 50mm


Special Collection

Francis Hookham Collection of Hand Held Electronic Calculators


Provenance

Donated by Francis Hookham in 1987.


Inscription

“VATMAN
MINI VIDEO LCD” (front, centre left)


Description Notes

White and black Vatman Mini Video LCD, with white number keys, red ‘clear’ keys, and all function keys in black except a red ‘minus’ key. At front top is an on/off switch, a ∑ switch and a switch for changing the number of decimals displayed.

10-digit LCD display, with yellow filter.
Above the screen is a printer, with a moveable bar on which to load a print roll.
Rear panel gives power supply details.

Keys are long-travel, and are initially quite heavy to the touch but after a faint pseudo-click become much more lightly weighted for the rest of the depression, which is of the soft type (i.e. they give no click) (S Davis 16/7/2007).


References


Events

Description
Pocket Electronic Calculator

The pocket electronic calculator is now familiar to us all. However, these everyday objects were still a novelty in the early 1970s and priced out of the reach of most customers. To our modern eyes, the operation of a calculator is quite simple, at least for basic arithmetic. We just push the buttons and the machine does the hard part for us. Since calculators never make mistakes, we need never worry about what goes on inside.

Behind the buttons and screen lies a complex set of miniature circuits. It is the ability of electronics firms to make smaller and smaller components that has led to the success of the calculator. All the electronic circuits that provide the calculating power can now fit onto tiny ‘chips’ of silicon. By also developing the technology for liquid crystal displays (LCD’s), manufacturers were able to shrink calculators even further. When solar power arrived towards the end of the 1970s they could even be made without batteries. Prices fell whilst popularity soared.

Despite all this technology, successful use of the calculator still relies on the knowledge of the operator. The latest machines pack in countless functions and require a large instruction manual. Their increasing power has led to debates about their proper use in schools. The widespread use of calculators – at school, home and in the office – has been blamed for falling standards of arithmetic.

This is in contrast with the early days of calculator use. During the 1970s, a number of textbooks were published to encourage people to use what was still an unfamiliar instrument. These would give examples of how calculators could help with anything, from income tax forms to the weekly shopping list!


FM:42057

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