Speaking of old calculators
Jan. 30th, 2005 08:41 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I remember seeing this on the Web a while back and being amazed: The Friden EC-130 and its successor the EC-132, four-function RPN desk calculators from 1964-65. They cost about $2000 in 1965 dollars.
While they're primitive and hulking by modern standards, and apparently broke all the time because of a manufacturing problem, they're also beautiful, something you'd expect to see Dave Bowman using to override HAL. The interior was all discrete components, and the stack was displayed on a four-line green vector CRT.
While they're primitive and hulking by modern standards, and apparently broke all the time because of a manufacturing problem, they're also beautiful, something you'd expect to see Dave Bowman using to override HAL. The interior was all discrete components, and the stack was displayed on a four-line green vector CRT.
no subject
Date: 2005-01-30 07:31 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-30 07:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-30 08:18 pm (UTC)Some do, some don't. The thermal envelope for the Pentium-M is somewhere around 45 watts at mid-load.
'The nameplate says 115 VAC at 0.6 amps, which I guess would be 69 watts if that's the RMS current.'
That'd have to be RMS, since Vp_p is around 165V. I don't imagine that the little buggers were exactly cool running, but I guess they probably didn't work very well before they warmed up anyway.
no subject
Date: 2005-01-30 08:21 pm (UTC)