Vacuum Tubes to Transistors—From the Anita Mark VIII to Hewlett Packard and Wang

As early as the late 1950s, engineers at the British firm of Sumlock Comptometer Limited, a manufacturer of adding machines, imagined that electronic circuits might be used to carry out arithmetic operations in calculators that fit on a desktop.  In 1961 Sumlock began to sell the Anita Mark VII and Anita Mark VIII electronic calculators, compact vacuum tube machines that could do simple arithmetic.

By 1964 several other companies were considering the electronic calculator market, using transistorized circuits rather than tubes. These included the California manufacturer of calculating machines, Friden; Japanese consumer electronics companies selling under the trade names Sony and Sharp; and the California inventor Thomas E. Osborne, whose 1964 prototype electronic calculator would influence instrument maker  Hewlett-Packard’s first electronic calculator, the HP 9100 (1968). Also in 1964, the Massachusetts firm of Wang Laboratories announced its Wang LOCI, a “logarithmic calculating instrument.”

These early electronic calculators were large, heavy, expensive products, with keyboards patterned after calculating machines. The Anita, Friden, Sony, and Sharp calculators performed the four basic arithmetic operations of addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division. In 1966 Monroe International Corporation, a descendent of an American calculating machine company, introduced the Monroe EPIC 3000, an electronic calculator that not only performed basic arithmetic but took square roots. The same year a rival firm, SCM Marchant, offered calculators with and without the ability to take square roots.

The Wang LOCI, sold from1965, carried out all these operations at the touch of a key, and had further keys for finding squares, inverse squares, inverse square roots, and inverse logarithms. One form of this calculator, the LOCI II, had rough programming capabilities. Wang also soon brought out its Series 300 calculators, which were oriented toward business rather than scientific calculations. Other firms such as Sony would soon offer desktop machines that took square roots and had limited programming capabilities.

Those using adding machines had long relied on paper tapes to print out the results of calculations. The Monroe EPIC 3000 and the 1968 Friden 1150 calculators had printing mechanisms.

In the late 1960s and early 1970s, programmable desktop calculators came to have many of the capabilities of early computers, at a greatly reduced size and price. The HP9100, sold from 1968, offered a wide range of trigonometric, exponential, and hyperbolic functions. Wang responded with its 700 and 600 series calculators.

This is a prototype for a non-printing desktop electronic calculator made by Sony Corporation of Japan. It has an array of nine digit keys, with a zero bar and a decimal point key below these. The keyboard also includes keys for the four arithmetic operations and an equals key.
Description
This is a prototype for a non-printing desktop electronic calculator made by Sony Corporation of Japan. It has an array of nine digit keys, with a zero bar and a decimal point key below these. The keyboard also includes keys for the four arithmetic operations and an equals key. The machine also has an on/off switch, a clear key, and an “attention” light on the left and five further keys on the right. Behind is a display for the answer. The machine shows result up to ten digits long in ten tubes.
A mark on the front left of the machine reads: SONY. A mark on the back reads: SONY ELECTRONIC CALCULATOR (/) MODEL MD-6 NO. 7K282214.
A slightly earlier Sony prototype calculator was exhibited at the World Electronics Show in New York in the latter part of March 1964, and the Japanese Pavilion at the New York World Exposition opening in April. Early engineering drawings for the MD-6 are dated July 18, 1964.
References:
Accession File
Documentation received as part of accession 313986.
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1964
maker
Sony Corporation of America
ID Number
CI.334388
accession number
313986
catalog number
334388
This documentation consists of a photocopy of a press release in English, copy of a press release in Japanese, and a copy of a photograph of a prototype Sony all-electronic desk calculator.
Description
This documentation consists of a photocopy of a press release in English, copy of a press release in Japanese, and a copy of a photograph of a prototype Sony all-electronic desk calculator. The calculator was to be exhibited in the Japanese Pavilion at the New York World Exposition opening in April 1964.
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1964
maker
Sony Corporation
ID Number
CI.313986.04
catalog number
313986.04
accession number
313986
By the early 1960s, Sony Corporation had gained an international reputation for such consumer electronics products as a pocket transistor radio and a transistorized television. It exhibited a prototype desktop electronic calculator in 1964.
Description
By the early 1960s, Sony Corporation had gained an international reputation for such consumer electronics products as a pocket transistor radio and a transistorized television. It exhibited a prototype desktop electronic calculator in 1964. In 1967, it released the SOBAX, or solid state abacus. It was called an "ICC" or integrated circuit calculator. By 1968, the machine sold in the United States for $1,250.
The non-printing, four-function desktop electronic calculator has an array of nine digit keys at the center front. Zero and decimal point keys are below these. Immediately to the right are cancel, subtraction, and addition keys. Right of these keys are memory clear, memory input, and total keys, as well as a round-off switch.
Immediately to the left of the digit keys are division, multiplication, and result keys. Left of these are repeat and memory out keys. Still further left are the on/off switch and the clear key. Behind is a fourteen-digit display window. A decimal point lever is below the result display, and a minus lamp is at the far left. The case includes a plastic handle at the top. A cord extends from the back and can be wound around protruding “cord anchors” for storage.
A mark on the left front of the machine reads: SOBAX. A tag at the top reads: SONY.
Compare CI*334388.
References:
Sony Corporation of America, SOBAX: SONY Solid State Calculator ICC-500W Owner’s Instruction Manual, New York: Sony Corporation, no date. This is CI*313986.10.
Sony Corporation, “Press Release: Sony Portable Electronic Calculator ‘SOBAX ICC-500’.” May 15, 1967. This is CI*313986.07.
P. H. Wiggins, “Calculators Hold Answers for Business,” New York Times, June 2, 1968, p. F26.
An extensive discussion of the development of the SOBAX 500 is at the online Old Calculators Web Museum.
Location
Currently not on view
date made
ca 1968
maker
Sony Corporation of America
ID Number
CI.334389
accession number
313986
catalog number
334389
These four sheets are photocopies of a three-page press release and two photographs of an early desktop electronic calculator sold by Sony Corporation.For a related object, see CI*334389.Currently not on view
Description
These four sheets are photocopies of a three-page press release and two photographs of an early desktop electronic calculator sold by Sony Corporation.
For a related object, see CI*334389.
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1967
maker
Sony Corporation
ID Number
CI.313986.07
catalog number
313986.07
accession number
313986
This pamphlet describes the operation of the SOBAX ICC-500, an early desktop electronic calculator made by Sony Corporation. The pamphlet is written in Japanese.For a related object, see CI*334389.Currently not on view
Description
This pamphlet describes the operation of the SOBAX ICC-500, an early desktop electronic calculator made by Sony Corporation. The pamphlet is written in Japanese.
For a related object, see CI*334389.
Location
Currently not on view
date made
ca 1968
maker
Sony Corporation
ID Number
CI.313986.09
catalog number
313986.09
accession number
313986
This pamphlet describes in Japanese the operation of the Sony SOBAX ICC-2500.For a related object, see CI*334390.Currently not on view
Description
This pamphlet describes in Japanese the operation of the Sony SOBAX ICC-2500.
For a related object, see CI*334390.
Location
Currently not on view
date made
ca 1969
maker
Sony Corporation
ID Number
CI.313986.14
catalog number
313986.14
accession number
313986

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