On Jan 1, 2020, at 8:45 AM, Robert G. Schaffrath <robert.s...@gmail.com> wrote:There were ways to send ASCII symbols to the ASR33 punch that caused characters to be formed by the punched dots. My favorite was "DOES NOT COMPUTE!".
Sometimes, I miss that old tech though I really would not want to have to make a living now working with it.
Much prefer Linux/Windows/MacOS and C, C#, Node.js and a few other languages I picked up over the last 40 years.
On Jan 2, 2020, at 10:12 AM, Robert G. Schaffrath <robert.s...@gmail.com> wrote:Funny, I do not recall that. I had a TI-57 in high school that was a gift from my parents. Quite useful for pre-calculus in 12th grade.
When I was in college, I saved up and bought a TI-59 that used magnetic cards to save programs on. Still have it though the battery module is long dead. Probably have the TI-57 somewhere too. I retired it when I got the TI-59.
On Jan 2, 2020, at 12:09 PM, gregebert <greg...@hotmail.com> wrote:I still have my $10 APF scientific calculator from 1976 which got me thru high school, college, and did my taxes on it for a few years thereafter.The VFD display is still working nicely. Not programmable.
My first calc. was a 4-function Rapid-Man from Eaton's Canada. It cost me about $150 back in 1970 and I continued to use it at work in the pharmacy of the old Brampton Peel Memorial Hospital - it was the first electronic calculator in the whole hospital - administration was too cheap to buy us any new high technology. I also had the first fax machine in Brampton Ontario it came from a Canada Government surplus sale and when I printed out the transaction record the header was "PMO Private Office Fax " ie from Jean Chretien !!
Pharma Phil
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I have an Anita 1011 calculator. It is for sale, because I have no idea what to do with it. It needs a greater authority than I to make it work, because on arrival it didn't and I don't want to fiddle with it.
I bought it from a man whose mother had died. This was back in
2009. She once worked for the Morris Cowley car factory in Oxford,
England, in the accounts department. On her retirement she was
allowed to keep the calculator and I understood when I bought it
that it was working well. I was shown a few photographs of it in
operation, The one below seems to be the only picture I still
have, showing 00000000s.

It arrived in a large box, well packed in a sea of styrofoam peanuts. But when I opened it, it was clear the cheap plastic pressel switch on the back had perished and shattered. This was brittle, delicate and protruded somewhat.
I replaced the switch with a metal toggle, but all I could get the display to show, once switched on, was all 999999s. So it has been stored like this since 2009 and I now need to get rid of it.
As it is such a rare item, I have not the heart to gut it for the tubes and I would like it to go to a good home, someone who might be able to repair it perhaps.
It comes with the manual for a later model, which came with it when I received it. I understand the operation is exactly the same.
Here are a few more pictures, before I fitted the toggle switch
where the loose wires and round hole are. The assembly has some
very early ICs and I expect for this reason only it is
interesting. 13 PCBs is not for the faint-hearted, but I would be
overjoyed if anyone could restore this rarity. It may be a simple
fix, it may be a horror. Who knows?



I still have a mobile number, home phone and address for the
person I bought it from. No idea if these still work, but it's
provenance of some kind.
Offers please.
Happy New Decade,
John S