That would be an Abacus.
Depends if you mean the electronic calculator or not? Before we had calculators we had slide rulers. In 1632, the circular and rectangular sliderule was invented by W. Oughtred. William Seward Burroughs invented the first practical adding and listing machine. Burroughs submitted a patent application in 1885 for his 'Calculating Machine' and the patent was awarded in 1888.
1623: German Mathematician Wilhelm Schickard developed the first mechanical calculator
The first calculator was invented in 1623.
The oldest calculator, the abacus, was invented in ancient Egypt(unknown date). The first Mechanical calculator, known as the Calculating clock, was invented by Willhelm Schickard in 1623. The first electronic desktop calculator were announced by the Bell Punch Co, in Uxbridge England in 1961. Finally, the first handheld computer was invented in 1980.
No, the very first mechanical calculators could only add and subtract. The first mechanical calculators were invented in 1623 by Wilhelm Schickard, followed by the Pascaline, invented in 1645 by Blaise Pascal. However, calculators that could multiply and divide were in use by the 19th century.
Invented by Blaise Pascal (1623-1662), it was called a Pascaline, a mechanical calculator that used connected gears to perform additions.
Blaise Pascal in 1623
the person who invented it was Hugo Caisaguano
Abacuses, a calculator's predecessor was used as early as 2400 B.C. A German named Wilhelm Schickard invented the first digital mechanical calculator in 1623. The first smaller calculators, called comptometers were invented in 1884 by a U. S. citizen named Dorr E. Felt. There were numerous other upgrades after this including one built into a desk, made by the Japanese, but that is all I wish to say.
John Heminges and Henry Condell, two members of the King's Men and two of Shakespeare's closest associates (they are named in his will) were responsible for publishing the First Folio in 1623.
no The first calculator goes back to north Africa in the form of the Abacus and it was a counting frame. many variations followed. the one the modern versions are more varied upon is from Blaise Pascal, a French philosopher and mathematician born in 1623.
The first comedy to appear in the contents of the First Folio in 1623 was The Tempest.
In a court case it was decided that in 1939 at Iowa state university is were the first "Digital computer" was born. But the first digital computer would have to be a calculator since they come out in 1623.