eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More. When it was launched in 1972, a little handheld instrument ...
I must have calculators on the mind. On the www.hpmuseum.com Web site, there’s quite a bit of discussion about the 35 th anniversary of the HP 35 calculator and the maybe soon-to-be introduced HP 35s ...
The beloved HP-35, one of the first scientific calculators able to “perform transcendental functions such as trigonometric, logarithmic and exponential functions” with an LED display just received an ...
Believe it or not, there are some retro gadgets that are even too old for us. So we must seize on them while we can, because soon the only machines that will fall into this category will be from the ...
A year ago, I finally added an example of the very first handheld scientific calculator – the HP 35 – to my collection. If you don’t insist on a pristine unit, they can be had for quite reasonable ...
California advances AI safety with SB 53, requiring transparency and risk reporting. Anthropic backs the bill, calling it a “trust but verify” approach. AI-driven automation is the theme of this ...
The HP-35 scientific calculator managed to replace the slide rule almost overnight, using a legendary combination of form and function. The HP-35 scientific calculator managed to replace the slide ...
‘Tony Trujillo, the CEO at the time, struck a deal to sell the first HP-35 calculators to the University of New Mexico bookstore. Now we are a platinum level partner with HPE and a gold level partner ...
Feel that? That's the unexpected stir of nostalgia welling inside your dorktic-loin. Rest easy, you're not alone. In fact, that picture aroused a deeply seeded HP fanboi-ism long obscured by thick ...
Pictured above is the HP 12C Financial Programmable Calculator, available from the Hewlett-Packard website for $69.99. What makes this calculator totally unique among all consumer electronic products ...
Hewlett-Packard has given new life to its calculator history through applications for the iPhone and Windows. They're practical, but not cheap. Stephen Shankland worked at CNET from 1998 to 2024 and ...