Real calculators modeled after desktop calculators

os calc.png

The product designers over at MintPass have created these concept designs for real life calculators that look just like the calculators that pop up on a Windows or Mac OS screen.

via The Raw Feed

31 Comments

| Leave a comment

I wonder what would happen if I pressed that bright, shiny red button...

At least with sufficient effort you could implement the maximize and minimize buttons.

Holy crap. I want the Windows one. Looks like a concept only at this point. Too bad.

I like these! Except I have mine in "Scientific" mode at all times. Plus they need double-sided tape on the backs, so you can stick it onto the screen (and hey, if they do this and they put the solar stip on the back as well, it'd even be powered by the actual PC... Well, monitor / LCD screen actually).

I'd be very disappointed if the windows version didn't morph to the wider format when scientific mode is selected.

I wonder if they work incorrctly, like the software versions (at least the Windows version). 2 + 3 x 4 does not equal 20, despite what the simple windows calculator says. Like Myatu, I keep mine in scientific mode all the time, which does calculate the answer correctly as 14.

If the designers are clever as they seem that would be the on/off button

Please Excuse Sally Aunt Dear My?

I want to see a physical version of the Windows 7 calculator. Seriously, that thing rocks!

Cute.

But I use "emacs -f calc" - model *that* :-)

I like the way you think. Grabbing one of these off the screen while someone is watching you work would blow their freakin' mind.

Now I wonder if I could find a trash can that gets overstuffed and bloated as soon as you put a single document in it.

Yeah, no scientific mode = Fail. I'd love to see a real-life SpeedCrunch calc, too...

What's that sound? The buzz of MR and Apple lawyers sharpening their pencils?

I also use my calc in scientific mode.. but I think the calculator actually handles order of operations perfectly. In "standard" view, it performs the operations as they're entered, just like a standard desktop calculator. In "scientific" view, it performs them according to PEMDAS. That seems really logical to me.

Unfortunately, it doesn't seem to be in the help file! They certainly should have covered that...

Side note:

I think it's funny that the actual physical calculators would reflect the design philosophies of the operating systems they're based upon. I.e. the Mac calculator looks really slick and high end but has very limited functionality. (no square root, no back space, no radian...) The Windows calculator looks really cheap and plasticky but just does more.

Neither one would make a very good calculator, except for a really basic kicking around on the desktop type calculator.

2 + 3 * 4 does equal 20. If you mean, 2 + (3 * 4) then sure, 14 is where it's at.

If they made a version of the Mac Calculator in Scientific RPN mode I would pay all kinds of money to get one.

Multiplication is completed previous to addition unless the numbers to be added are enclosed by parentheses. Examples: 2 + 3 * 4 = 14 (2+3)*4 = 20.

I think it's funny that the actual physical calculators would reflect the design philosophies of the operating systems they're based upon. I.e. the Mac calculator looks really slick and high end but has very limited functionality. (no square root, no back space, no radian...) The Windows calculator looks really cheap and plasticky but just does more..

I think it's funny that your post is ironically a great representation the general misrepresentation of Macs.

Not only is the Mac calculator "really slick and high end" (a.k.a., a better interface) it has way MORE functionality. It opens as a basic calculator without a bunch of clutter for most usage. But, If you want a scientific calendar just click "command-2" or select it from the standard Apple menu in the Apple menu bar.

Here it is, check it out:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Calculator_Screenshot_MacOSX.png

It also has:

- A Programmer calculator (command-3 or Apple menu option)

- Conversions of Area, Currency, Energy or Work, Length, Power, Pressure, Speed, Temperature, Time, Volume, and Weights and Masses

- An RPN mode

- An optional 'Paper Tape' window

- You can save and print the 'Paper Tape' results or copy and paste them from it, whichever you prefer..

- It can speak results to you and speak the numbers you type as you press them. Huge time savings when you are looking at the content of what you are typing in and confirming you are hitting in the correct numbers without having to look at your calculator.

- And more...


I hate to break it to you, but Macs are good looking AND smart. Ouch...

I said above, " .. But, If you want a scientific calendar ... "

correction: I meant to say, "scientific calculator".

I forgot to mention that you can also simply click the round green button towards the top-left of the Mac calculator to switch between Basic, Scientific, and Programmer modes. And, yes, it does it in slick manner where the shape of the calculator seamlessly morphs into the new size which is not only good for aesthetics but also assists the user in knowing she is using the same calculator transformed instead of a new calculator and/or calculator window opening. It's a Mac thing.

I should also mention that the Mac calculator has been much like this for many years before Vista and Windows 7 came out. /smug

People still own/buy calculators? All the times I've needed a physical calculator, I just used my cellphone. Serves in a pinch.

@Cowicide: You awe but also scare me a little. I salute you.

Well at least one person remembers how to use Reverse Polish Notion which was going to be my question.

I meant "Notation". Noticed my mistake after I clicked submit.

If only there was a real world version of my favorite software calculator, emu48.

Oh, wait.

I, for one, just want a real, physical version of the I Ching calculator from Dirk Gently

This is obviously some strange new usage of the word "real" that I was not previously aware of.

Also, similar to emacs comment: I'd like a physical perl -lne 'print eval' .

Best of all would be a physical calculator that did date math (addition and subtraction of dates/times and durations) easily, until we finally give up on the stupid Julian calendar in favor of the French Revolutionary calendar or some other such metric time.

The real scary thing is that I hardly ever even use the Apple calculator. I use "Calculate & Append" via the freeware CalcService from Devon Tech. So no matter what app i'm using, i can type in a calculation, highlight it, hit " command = " and the total shows up to the right of it after an equal sign.

http://www.devon-technologies.com/products/freeware/services.html

Or slide the calculator you have cunningly hidden behind the screen into view as you drag the calculator window off the desktop...

Re above:

Devon Tech also do the interesting DevonThink software:

http://boingboing.net/2009/01/27/diy-how-to-write-a-b.html

and another free OS X service module thingy that adds the time and date in various ways and does a ton of complex formatting commands called WordService, but only to cocoa apps like mail and textedit. (It's on the same page)

From the beginning I've never quite got why you can't cut and paste the date and time via the OS anyway. (By which I don't mean open a terminal window and cut and paste it from that)

I wonder if they work incorrctly, like the software versions (at least the Windows version). 2 + 3 x 4 does not equal 20, despite what the simple windows calculator says. Like Myatu, I keep mine in scientific mode all the time, which does calculate the answer correctly as 14.

The simple version does order of operations like an old adding machine. That is how they are supposed to work.

What you may really want is a stack-based postfix hp calculator, so there is no ambiguity or operator precedence: 2 3 4 × +

@Gloria

You clearly haven't sat an exam since the invention of SMS. Just having a cell phone on your person is practically grounds for expulsion these days.

Anyway, my phone doesn't do fractions or stats like my Casio. Not that I'm not sure there's an app for that. But, y'know, J2ME. Meh.

Leave a comment

Anonymous

More items

100-word fiction competition — win an HP MediaSmart EX495

The prize is a $700 HP MediaSmart EX495 PC, set up as a Windows home server, with 1.5TB of storage and Mac/Time Machine support. The winner shall be chosen at arbitrary whim. Runners-up get something random from the gadget dungeon. The theme is "Found in Space." 100 words long. Go!... More.

Apple patents anti-user attention-complianceware

Apple's filed a patent on a design for a device that won't let its owner use it unless that person demonstrates that she has complied with an advertiser's demands by paying attention to an ad and taking some action indicating her dutiful attention. It's amazing how many of these vendors fail to und... More.

Viacom's top lawyer thinks lawsuits were "terrorism" - but he's learned nothing from the experience

Photo: Mag3737 Michael Fricklas, Viacom's General Counsel, gave a lecture to a Yale Law class in which he confessed that suing people for copyright infringement felt "like terrorism." He says that this was bad strategy on the entertainment industry's part, as was "bad" DRM. That's the good part --... More.

Senators draw maps of their home states

Marilyn sez, "To kick off Geography Awareness Week, National Geographic asked all the senators in Congress to draw their home states freehand. Some of the results are pretty funny!" (Shown here: Al Franken's cartographically masterful Minnesota rendering) Senators: Can You Draw Your State? (Than... More.

The Art of Jim Campbell: Seeing In Pixels

A man runs. He falls down. He struggles back onto his feet and he runs some more. It's a simple narrative. Even without much detail, you can understand what's going on. Pause the video, though, and the scene isn't nearly as clear. Movement makes up for the lack of other visual information. Your br... More.

Features

Reviews Videos
More Features