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Sharp Corp. announced it has received an award for its electronic calculators from the world's largest electrical engineering society. The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers has ...
By 1977, a liquid crystal display calculator known as the Teal LC811 sold regularly for $24.95, with a sale price of $19.95. By 1985, the solar-powered Sharp EL-345 sold for $5.95. Both of these ...
Sharp has launched a new range of electronic dictionaries in the UK – the PW-E260, PW-E300 and PW-E500. All offering you content from the Oxford English Dictionary series, along with other features ...
So, we have to give Sharp at least some props for adding MP3 playback functions to its FD-7000MP, SD-S90, and SD-M50 e-dictionaries, which are apparently targeted at the Korean market.
Posted in hardware Tagged calculator, ken shirriff, reverse engineering, Sharp EL-8 ← 2020: As The Hardware World Turns Seeking Enlightenment: The Quest To Restore Vision In Humans → ...