Hewlett-Packard 9100A

"The new Hewlett-Packard 9100A personal computer" is "ready, willing, and able... to relieve you of waiting to get on the big computer."[1]

The Hewlett-Packard 9100A (hp 9100A) is an early computer (or programmable calculator), first appearing in 1968. HP called it a desktop calculator because, as Bill Hewlett said, "If we had called it a computer, it would have been rejected by our customers' computer gurus because it didn't look like an IBM. We therefore decided to call it a calculator, and all such nonsense disappeared."[1]

History

The unit was descended from a prototype produced by engineer Tom Osborne, who joined the company when HP decided to adopt the project.[2][3][4]

An engineering triumph at the time, the logic circuit was produced without any integrated circuits, the assembly of the CPU having been entirely executed in discrete components. With CRT readout, magnetic card storage, and printer, the price was around $5,000 ($34,000 today).[5]

The 9100A was the first scientific calculator by the modern definition (i.e. trig, log/ln, and exponential functions), and was the beginning of Hewlett-Packard's long history of using Reverse Polish Notation (RPN) entry on their calculators.

Due to the similarities of the machines, Hewlett-Packard was ordered to pay about $900,000 in royalties to Olivetti after copying some of the solutions adopted in the Programma 101, like the magnetic card and the architecture, in the HP 9100.[6][7]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "History of the 9100A desktop calculator, 1968". Hewlett Packard. Retrieved 2009-12-18.
  2. "Osborne's Story". HP9825.com. Retrieved 2010-05-11.
  3. "How the Model 9100A Was Developed", Bernard M. Oliver, September 1968, Hewlett-Packard Journal]
  4. 1994 letter from Tom Osborne to Barney Oliver, hp9825.com
  5. Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–. Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Retrieved November 10, 2015.
  6. "Olivetti Programma P101/P102". Old Computers. Retrieved 11 August 2010. The P101, and particularly the magnetic card, was covered by a US patent (3,495,222, Perotto et al.) and this gave to Olivetti over $900.000 in royalties by HP alone, for the re-use of this technology in the HP9100 series.
  7. Perotto, Pier Giorgio (February 10, 1970). "3,495,222 Program Controlled Electronic Computer" (multiple). United States Patent Office. et al. Google patents. Retrieved November 8, 2010.

External links

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