I don't collect calculators but I often have 
		opportunity to grab one or two with some electronic junk. From simple 
		abacus, through slide rules and mechanical stepper drum machines, to 
		electronic units, sometimes even programmable. 
		First wide-spread calculators were abacus calculators, a typical with 
		round pieces of wood on steel rods in wooden frame. Abaci are used even today, 
		especially in small shops in Ukraine or Lithuania, and calculating on 
		them can be really fast if it's done by experienced person.
		In engineering, slide rules were popular calculators. Contrary 
		to abacus, slide rule allows to divide and multiply numbers, but it can 
		be used to compute logarithms, powers, roots and some trigonometric 
		functions. The set of logarithmic scales on sliding parts made the most 
		time-consuming computations easier. Slide rules were made of different 
		materials, in different sizes (from full-sized ones to pocket-size 
		units) and in different shapes (linear, circular, even with replaceable nomograms). There were also specialised rules to convert units or 
		compute values (in ballistics, airplane navigation, architecture, 
		cryptography etc).
		Simultaneously more expensive mechanical machines were made. Mechanical 
		arithmometers could be used to perform all 4 operations using counters. 
		Arithmometers with pinwheel - gear with different count of 
		protrusions, were manufactured till mid-80s. Abaci and mechanical 
		arithmometers are used even today, especially in former Soviet Union 
		countries. Why? Because they don't need electricity.
		Since late 70s electronic calculators became cheaper and more 
		accessible. They became smaller too, from large, tabletop units to 
		pocket, microprocessor-based battery-powered calculators known today. 
		Nixie tubes became replaced with VFD displays, VFD with LEDs, then LCD. 
		Some really old units had CRT display, but they were so expensive that 
		they never gained popularity. First calculators were transistor-based, 
		sometimes even had ferrite memory. Later units were made of TTL chips, 
		later were one-chip constructions with dedicated chips.
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