Friden, Inc.

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Friden, Inc.
Former type Private
Genre Technology
Fate Acquired
Successor(s) Singer Corporation
Founded San Leandro, California, U.S.
Founder(s) Carl Friden
Defunct 1965 (1965)

Friden Calculating Machine Company (Friden, Inc.) was an American manufacturer of typewriters and electronic calculators. It was founded by Carl Friden in San Leandro, California in 1934. Friden electromechanical calculators were robust and popular.

Friden Calculator

In 1957, Friden purchased the Commercial Controls Corporation of Rochester, New York. This gave them the Flexowriter teleprinter, an electric typewriter capable of being used as part of unit record equipment developed in World War II for the Department of the Navy to automatically type "regret to inform you" letters to the survivors of fallen servicemen, the predecessor to modern computers. The Flexowriter could be attached to Friden calculators and driven by paper tape to produce bills and other form letters which had names of customers and amounts of bills filled in automatically. Friden eventually expanded into production of a few models of early transistorized computers.

Friden introduced the first fully transistorized desktop electronic calculator, the model EC-130 in June 1963, designed by Bob Ragen.[1] This machine had a 13-digit capacity and a 5-inch CRT display. It used a magnetostrictive delay line for memory (delay line memory) IEEE First-Hand, to save money on expensive transistors. The EC-130 sold for $2200, about three times the price of comparable electromechanical calculators of the time. It was the first calculator to use reverse Polish notation (RPN), which eliminated the need for parentheses to specify the order of operations in complex calculations. The successor model EC-132 added a square root function.

In 1965 the company was purchased by the Singer Corporation, but continued operation under the Friden brand name until 1974.

The Singer – Friden Research Center in Oakland, California, later moved to Palo Alto, California (1965 to 1970), did not come up with an IC-based, truly pocket-sized calculator in time to compete with the corresponding new Japanese products, such as the Busicom, based on Intel 4004 in 1971, Casio Mini and Sharp EL-805 in 1972. In particular, engineer James M. Comstock, working on a pocket calculator project, did not get the necessary priority and support by management to develop such a product.

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