Remember this?
The hottest tech gadget in the summer of 1975. The boomers’ iPhone!
The inflation adjusted cost today? $1,600.98! How’s that stack up with a modern day laptop or tablet at $500-1,000?
This ad from the June 1975 Technology Review goes a long way in explaining the productivity boom of the past thirty years. Enjoy your technology and keep it in perspective, comrades! (click here if ad is not observable)


I remember. The HP series, starting with the HP-35, put slide rule makers out of business. Creative destruction and all that.
I have a Scientific calculator purchased in 1985 made by Casio, model fx-570MS. It has never needed a new battery and works just fine.
In May 1975, in my senior year of college, I showed up for my final exam in Microelectronics with my trusty K+E Deci-Lon slide rule. When the professor saw it, he said I would not be able to complete the test with a slide rule, and loaned me his brand new HP-55. Few students owned calculators, but there had been a lot of borrowing during exams. $395 was about two semesters worth of books, or one semester of room and board.
The last time I used a slide rule “for real” was around 1996 – with two dead calculators, someone pulled a slide rule out as a joke, but didn’t know how to use it. I demonstrated how it worked to a bunch of amazed people.