Elektronika B3-21
Elektronika B3-21 (Cyrillic: Электроника Б3-21) was the first Soviet programmable calculator. It was released in 1977 and was sold initially for 350 rubles (190 in 1980-81, and just 80 rubles at late 1981). For comparison, 120 rubles was a monthly engineer's salary. Production was stopped in 1982 because of introduction of more advanced Elektronika B3-34.
Features
- program memory - 60 steps in RAM (no ROM, the code is lost after shut down);
- data memory - 2 operating registers, 7 additional directly addressed registers, 6 loop stack registers;
- accuracy - 8 digits in the Significand(7 if the value includes decimal dot), 2 exponent digits;
- operations - besides 4 arithmetic ones there were 1/x, x2, xy, sqrt(x), exp(x), ln(x), sin(x), cos(x);
- conditional and unconditional branching, subroutine calls;
- speed - 3-5 operations (program steps) per second on average (with xy taking the longest time of about 3 seconds);
- display - red LED seven-segment display, with small lenses in front of each digit (to enlarge the very small LED digits used)
- powered by disc accumulators (4 * 1.25 Volts) or charger.
Derived models
- Elektronika MK-46 - desktop version, differed in having 66 steps of program memory, digital inputs for connecting external devices, and output, e.g. for printer (along with functionality to control them);
- Elektronika MK-64 (and later Elektronika MS-1103) - the same as MK-46 but with internal analog-to-digital conversion (ADC) installed so that several analog inputs could be measured (measurements from -9.99 to 9.99 Volts with accuracy of 0.02 Volts);
- Elektronika MK-47 - rare handheld clone of B3-21, allowing the storage of programs on magnetic memory cards.
gollark: That sort of thing might run into inaccuracy with advancing technology, but probably in an underestimatey way.
gollark: No, that's roughly average life expectancy over here.
gollark: I have no idea who that is.
gollark: As opposed to passively awful for me like mostly not doing exercise.
gollark: I determined that given my horrible tendency to devalue medium/long-term stuff automatically anyway I should really not do things which are *actively* awful for me without a very good reason.
External links
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