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HP Plans The Uber-Calculator 194
Compenguin writes "Over at TiCalc.Org information has leaked out about the new HP Xpander. Reported specs:
133MHz RISC processor (downclocked to 66 for power consumption),
320x200 screen 256 shades of gray,
MP3 playing capabilities,
and a "futuristic look."
There is also a rumour flying around that it might run Pocket Linux as its OS. " Check out HP's page as well - and see our prior post on the 49G, the parent to this model.
Wow. When'z ZSHELL Come out? (Score:1)
da w00t.
Re:Yesss! (Score:1)
Batteries, Batteries, Batteries!
Running a fast CPU takes quite a bit of energy, and nobody is going to want a calculator that uses up four AAA batteries in 4 hours.
Another reason is that those old CPUs are quite cheap AND small. Put a 68060 (32bit, much faster) instead of a 68000 in a TI-89 and it'll probably cost a bit more than $140.
Of course, those old calculators probably weren't running 0.18 micron versions of those old CPUs; if they were, they'd probably be running at 66MHz as well.
-- Sig (120 chars) --
Your friendly neighborhood mIRC scripter.
Re:I can see it now... (Score:1)
Re:Damn, and I just bought a Ti-89 (Score:1)
Re:Calculator to end all calculators? (Score:2)
Re:Calculator to end all calculators? (Score:1)
Anyone that actually knows what the hell is going on in calculus class can probably integrate faster by hand than with a calculator.
If you want numerical integration the calculator comes closer to winning, but only on really tough calulus problems. For undergrad math courses the most powerful calculator that anyone should use is a scientific. Graphing calculators may help people get the right answer, but it doesn't make them any smarter. It just lowers the bar for academic achievement. (Then again, that seems to be what achievement is lately, finding new ways to lower the standards.)
Re:Shades of grey? (Score:1)
Re:the drawing of dorks! (Score:2)
Jesus H. Kee-rist, that's just the thing you need here in the year-2000 United States of Amerika, our new police state. Absolutely perfect to get your ass shot [concentric.net].
Someday I should tell you about the day a lady copy pulled a gun on me because she saw I had a ninety-glass [allenprecision.com] in a case hanging from my belt.
Yours WDK - WKiernan@concentric.net
Re:What about the tactile keys? (Score:1)
Even worse than the piss poor keys on the HP49, is the fact that virtually none of the keys *do* anything directly. It's the same problem that the TI89/92 have: lots of power, but you have to go through 4 menus to do get to it. The HP48GX on the other hand, has lots of keys which directly access functions. Two key strokes and the entire stack of complex numbers is converted from rectagular to polar, and vice versa.
I did a direct comparison with my girlfriend. She had a TI89 and I had an HP48GX. To enter a matrix into her calculator and perform a couple simple operations, took about 20 more key strokes than my mine.
Re:Calculators (Score:1)
Aren't any of you people Engineers (Score:2)
Many reasons
1. Interface
The Palms interface is optimised for use as an organisor, not a handy interface to use in a 3-hour math exam.
2. Software
I am probably among a select few people in that I know almost all of the HP48's fuctions (and used them for usefull purposes in my engineering classes). The HPs software is easly worth the cost of the calculator, now with the 49G and more symbolic stuff this is even more true. Would you want to load your MathCAD, Maple and Mathlab on you palm.
Why do I want this? I see this as being an all purpose data collector and field analysis tool. For me to do some field work requires both a calculator and a laptop. A PDA optimised for engineering use would kill two birds with one stone. Right know I thinking I could port or program specialized engineer software to it and be able to design revisions quickly and accurately in the field. Another use for this device is a data collector (ala survey total stations and GPS) the HP48GX is still a industry standard in this deparment but is getting too old and slow to be used in new inovations, like real time GIS data while you survey.
Just my two cents worth.
Bah! non-programmable rubbish... (Score:2)
Well, I can and do program my HP48GX right from the keyboard. (I wrote a simple little program just this morning while in the field.) And I have a LISP interpreter and also a copy of Turbo C v.2.0 (which I bought back in 1989!) on my HP200LX. Can you write any program at all for use on a Palm Pilot, no matter how trivial, on the Palm Pilot itself? Can you write a program for Windows CE on a Windows CE machine? No, you need a cross-compiler or something like that (and a damn costly one too) running on another real computer. Yeah, wow, a Palm Pilot or a WinCE PDA have processors that can run circles around the 80186 in my HP200LX, but you can't program it on itself, so as far as I am concerned my HP200LX still blows away any PDA currently shipping.
Yours WDK - WKiernan@concentric.net
Re:Brought to you by TI who abandoned the Avigo (Score:1)
The Avigo was positioned to try and dethrone the PalmPilot (not the Palm III, V, or VII, mind you -- just the PalmPilot). Although it had some decent features, TI effectively killed its appeal to the geek set by announcing that there would be no third-party anything. That's right -- you couldn't develop any hardware or software for it, and there were no provisions to install new software at all. TI is a very control-freakish company. You can't even link your calculator to a PC without buying a ~$40 link cable, or building your own for about $5 in parts.
Compare this to the original Pilot, which had dozens of applications coded in gcc and other free tools before the official Windows SDK was even released.
Of course, what makes this thread most off-topic is the fact that this calculator that was just announced is made by HP, not TI.
Re:Construction quality that bad? (Score:2)
Guess HP's gone downhill. I ran my HP41 over with a Chevy Suburban (yeah it was lying in soft sand, but still, a Suburban) and a while later dropped it in eighteen inches of water and it still is running, fifteen-plus years after I bought it.
I sure hope the HP48GX is made of stronger stuff than that 49 the top poster was complaining about, because I take it in the field daily to do land surveying, and we surveyors just destroy equipment, it comes with the territory. On the other hand, if it breaks it's not all that bad, because unlike my old 41, that 48GX is the company's property, not my own personal purchase.
Yours WDK - WKiernan@concentric.net
If I wanted a Casio, I would have bought one... (Score:1)
I'm not giving my 48G up any time soon... no matter how "underpowered" it is.
Re:Calculators (Score:1)
Re:Calculator to end all calculators? (Score:2)
Good God this is wonderful! Is it stable? I take back the negative things I said elsewhere about Palms. In fact, I think I'll go shopping and check out some prices. Now if I can only find a Palm-compatible PDA which accepts compact flash memory cards, so I can store a decent amount of data in there... Thank you for posting this!
Yours WDK - WKiernan@concentric.net
HP history (Score:2)
Re:Any more info? (Score:1)
And the teachers thought they had it bad when they made us put electrical tape over our IR ports . . .
Calculator? (Score:2)
Is this the name for the next generation PDA's, this "calculator"?
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Re:Back in the days of the TI-85 . . . (Score:2)
HP Quality Slipping (Score:2)
Re:Shades of grey? (Score:1)
Futuristic look? (Score:2)
Oh, wait - that is an ice chest. For overclockers to carry it around in.
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Re:Yesss of course it does! (Score:1)
Re:Calculator to end all calculators? (Score:1)
Re:Reverse Polish Nation? (Score:2)
So as though the NYT weren't enough, Thomas Friedman has a /. account now! But the Polish working class want their pensions and health care system back! youse dirty capitalist &^%$#.
Yours red Willy - WKiernan@concentric.net
Re:Aren't any of you people Engineers (Score:1)
*Hardware expansion bus: Springboard -- Supports software & hardware on single low-profile card, expansion of system memory, external I/O, etc.
*Programmability: Okay, Palm OS really isn't the best development platform in the world...something better than C for rapid development would be really nice. There are C, Lisp, and minimal Java compilers, all available free or cheaply now, though.
*CPU power: You know, the Dragonball chips really aren't that bad...the original Mac, every PC up to the 386's, and even a lot of early workstations (like the old Moto-powered Suns) has slower chips, and were perfectly seviceable for all kinds of scientific apps.
*Display: Probably the weakest link. 4-bit grayscale at 160x160 ain't gonna cut it for complex graphs, or anything 3-D.
*Interface: USB. Fast as 10/Base-T Ethernet, cheap, and low-power.
If all those are a little anemic for what you want, why not take a step back in time to the later Newtons? You lose a good bit in portability, but gain a 100+ MHz StrongARM processor, much better display, handwriting recognition, and an actual PCMCIA slot. I'm not familiar with how easy the Newton OS is to develop for, but it seems like it should be no worse than for the Mac.
RPN shell! Okay, lemme think... (Score:2)
Okay, first, you'd likely want keys on your "LinuxCalc" for things like mv, cat, grep, cut, and of course for things like | and <. Lotsa keys, just like any decent HP calculator. (I still LOVE my 11C! - it still works, and it's 15 years old!)
Okay, so, you'd type:
file1<enter>file2<enter><mv_key> for RPN. Simple!
For pipelining, you'd probably have to go backwards:
-d:<enter>-f7<enter><cut_key><|_key>fascdot<ent
I think. The pipelining one is hard, to be sure...you might need a special key to prevent it from calculating those first steps immediately. Of course, maybe that wouldn't be a bad thing. Have it pipe the current value to something else. Certainly RPN would make for an interesting UI...someone up to modifying Bash?
ps That was a pain in the ass to correctly enter all those html codes for the < & > marks. I hope you all appreciate that.
Re:HP == most lame assed calc for polish notation. (Score:1)
Re:A tad off TOpic (Score:1)
Some places and school will disallow a calculator that has either of the two above traits. You may not be able to use a TI-92 in a calc class, nor can you use it on the SATs. Ask your math department about approved calculators.
These calculators are expensive, so plan ahead. I bought my TI-82 in 1996 during high school and was able to use it all the way through college math.
Re:Bah! non-programmable rubbish... (Score:2)
On Board C
http://www.individeo.net/OnBoardC.html
Hot Paw Basic
http://www.hotpaw.com/rhn/hotpaw/
And about 8 more listed on this site:
http://www.wademan.com/Pilot/Program/FAQ.htm#On
Re:WHY? (Score:1)
Re:RPN shell! Okay, lemme think... (Score:1)
FYI, there's a bug in slashdot where if you select "plain old text", it thinks you want "extrans" and vice versa.
Normaly, I'm not much of a complainer, but this bug has gone unrepaired for at least 3-4 months, maybe longer.
I'm surprised that any self-respecting programer would let a bug as glaringly noticable go unrepaired as long as this one has. We know that nothing's perfect and that these things take time, but fix it allready!
That's what Lambda is for (Score:2)
WHY? (Score:3)
Re:Straight from the horse's mouth (Score:1)
Not that it matters.
Jeremy
mmm...tasty. (Score:5)
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Re:HP == most lame assed calc for polish notation. (Score:2)
I wrote a cool Fibonacci generator on the HP-25. First you seed the stack with a 0 and a 1. The program is
01 - Push
02 - Push
03 - Pop
04 - Pop
05 - +
06 - Goto 01
Re:Pretty Print (Score:1)
Real hackers. (Score:2)
Re:Calculator to end all calculators? (Score:1)
Reverse Polish Notation? (Score:3)
Alex Bischoff
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Yesss! (Score:2)
I've been interested in putting Linux on an ultra-portable device like this, and if this does run Mobile Linux (and if it doesn't, it will in short order) then it's time for some ultra-portable nethack playing! Woohoo!
Re:Aren't any of you people Engineers (Score:3)
An engineering PDA would need to have a good expansion interface (PCMCIA, perhaps) so that you can add whatever data acquisition / capture device your particular flavor of engineering requires, the CPU power & programability to manipulate & analyze the data you've captured, a display to visualize it, and a fast interface to upload it all to a real computer.
"The axiom 'An honest man has nothing to fear from the police'
mp3 Capability (Score:1)
Re:Yesss! (Score:1)
Re:Shades of grey? (Score:2)
Re:Yesss! (Score:1)
I'll get one (Score:2)
HP has a history about being way more hacker-friendly than the other calculator manufacturers regarding software and packaging - including a serial connector cable/PC software instead of selling it separately, making sweet stuff like compilers available, using established transfer protocols instead of proprietary, and of course the lovely RPN.. All for a reasonably low price.
If they can keep up with their previous cost-to-coolness ratio, I'm definitely going to buy one. Otherwise I'll probably have troubles resisting my urge to nick one ;)
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Calculators (Score:4)
Problem is I've found that in the real world outside of things like Physics degrees and whatnot these extra functions seem unnecessary. I've a laptop and access to a huge SGI mainframe if I need to do serious and/or graphical calculations and for the rest I find my Casio fx-991 (circa 1987 I guess) still works perfectly. Solar Powered too.
Maybe I'm a luddite or maybe I don't see the point (equally, there might be people out there who need a pocket-sized calculator that can play MP3s, runs linux etc etc). I guess if it was my only machine but I don;t want to carry around a PDA and a heavy calculator. Might as well carry my laptop and get better functionality, more mp3 storage, decent games and a useful screen for graphical work.
Convergence like this is odd because what's happening is that everything is tending to become the same. Computers, taht can do everything are slowly shrinking and becoming more easily portable (longer battery life, lighter, better screens etc) whilst PDAs and palmtops are gaining faster processors and the ability to do decent maths, play mp3s etc. Now calculators are heading in the same direction but from a different tack. So eventually we end up with the same thing.
I also find it annoying to carry around a multiplicity of items, It's bad enough with a mobile phone and a laptop (which I need to carry for my job). I can't be hassled carrying a pda and a calculator, especially when the start duplicating functions. I'd end up spending every night synch-ing everything to make sure the one mp3 I was desperate to listen to was on everything, just in case I lost or forgot the one gadget it was on. Nightmare!
I want one device that has everything I need on it and is easy and simple to back up in the evenings. Yes, I'd probably use lots of the cool functions on a new HP calculator and I like RPN but I've Mathematica, fortran amd others, not to mention all sorts of modelling and fem packages available on my laptop.
I'll shut up now
troc
Re:Calculator to end all calculators? (Score:1)
Re:Linux on an HP calculator (Score:1)
But you can really redirect a Linux console to the HP48!
[tudelft.nl]
Check it out...
From the URL:
Here it is: a fast and very complete terminal emulator for HP48 with a lot of features! Intended as terminal for a Linux system, but useful for other purposes as well.
It works like a charm...I am even able to connect my HP48GX to my Garmin GPS II+ (with other software of course)...:-)
Yours
Michael
Re:Calculator to end all calculators? (Score:2)
I found powerOne Finance, and I liked it so much--well, I didn't buy the company, but I did write a review of the program [themestream.com] on Themestream explaining what it does, how to use it, and how it helped me so much in that class.
85-90% of the problems in that class involved Time Value of Money, and powerOne's TVM worksheet put me one up on all the people who had to enter one line at a time into those stinky little business calculators. Worked great!
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Damn, and I just bought a Ti-89 (Score:1)
the drawing of dorks! (Score:1)
It'd make a REALLY nice MP3 player!! (Score:1)
I can't see why I'd get any other MP3 player, ever.
Re:Still easier yet (Score:1)
Re:Reverse Polish Notation? (Score:1)
Except then you get someone in there who believes that beauty is truth (and thus, truth is beauty) and the next thing you know there's a singularity in your accelerator. (Not that that would be a bad thing, but...)
Of course, if you've ever seen a physicist at 5am, you'll know that truth is definitely not beauty.
the geekiness of it all (Score:1)
Music to my ears (Score:1)
Re:JESUS FUCKING CHRIST, MAN (Score:1)
And most Germans wouldn't find Massachusetts either
Re:Reverse Polish Notation? (Score:2)
Xpander isn't a calculator per se... (Score:1)
The _real_ HP successor calculator, codenamed Ranger, is still coming...
(This all from public discussion from the designers/programmers over on comp.sys.hp48. Y'know, Usenet? The thing slashdot-type weblogs were supposed to replace?)
Re:the drawing of dorks! (Score:1)
Re:Yesss! (Score:1)
Heck, those old HPs with the plasma tube readouts wouldn't even run on batteries. The plasma tubes themselves required somewhere in the 50-200V for the bias voltage, IIRC..
Why Linux? (Score:1)
mp3?! (Score:1)
-J
Re:Calculator to end all calculators? (Score:1)
Re:WHY? (Score:2)
From the site....
a 32 bit, 133MHz RISC CPU a 320x200 screen with 256 shades of gray true sound for reading mp3's (mmmm... drool) possibly a "futuristic look"
The thing has true sound and the 'for reading mp3's sounds more like something the author stuck in there.....
It looks like to me that was just the authors comment...
it has 256 shades of grey.. dont go bananas this is not even really official from the company or anything folks..
That was my inital response also.. but it kind of led me to think maybe it was a bit of an exaggeration.. which I think it is someone may write a Mp3 program but it is just going to have a better sound system yb the looks of it
Jeremy
If you think education is expensive, try ignornace
Re:Yesss! (Score:1)
Try building a bode plot using the built in scripting langauge. It took about 2 minutes, although I'm sure that was mostly due to the scripting language.
You can never have too much CPU, as long as the batteries last....
Kraftwerk (Score:2)
Quote: ...By pressing on a special key it plays a little melody"
"I'm the operator with my pocket calculator
Calculators and music. Together again, for the first time. Yay.
Maple or Matlab? (Score:1)
Re:Yesss! (Score:2)
Re:Reverse Polish Notation? (Score:1)
Once you learn it, RPM beats algebraic notation hands down. It is especially nifty for programmable calculators
Yeah, it beats the heck out of DEB when doing those nasty LaGrangian Multipliers.
Re:Calculator to end all calculators? (Score:3)
Are you going to sit in math class trying to tap your way through a tough calculus problem? I think not.
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Re:Stupid university regulations (Score:2)
Personally I cant see why it makes any difference whether or not I need a calculator to work out a 2nd order linear differential equation, but it would make more sense to lay the emphasis on applying that to circuits and physics models.
Mind you as it happens i'm quite happy to pick up marks for copying the answers from my calculator
Re:HP == most lame assed calc for polish notation. (Score:1)
close. prefix notation is superior to the "normal" way. go learn more about the programming language lisp.
(does it even have a name?).
the "normal" was is called "infix".
What about the tactile keys? (Score:2)
I was sure someone would mention this.. the number one thing I love about my HP48 (and my former HP100LX) was the wonderful tactile response of the keys. It made up for not being able to have large keys, and you knew when you pressed something - you got a nice *thuck* sound.
The 49 IIRC doens't have the nice keys, and I hope this one does (although, what I'd like even more is a clip on keyboard for my palm that has the tactile keys in a 5 x 5 matrix or something. (Anyone want to manufacture that? I'll buy one now)
I just home the engineers strangled whoever made the descision not to use the nice keys! Let's make it in pretty "blueberry", but we'll through away a primary usability factor because it'll save $4/unit. Not to mention axing IR (like anyone ever used it to talk in an exam; You got like 2 feet max unless you heavily modified it and/or designed an amplifier/repeater box..)
Re:Reverse Polish Notation? (Score:3)
<Yoda_Accent>One Two plus, hmm.</Yoda_Accent>
I can see it now... (Score:2)
...Which of course we all know means it will come in 4 different translucent coloured cases
Gfunk007
Parentheses, who needs 'em (Score:2)
Re:Calculator to end all calculators? (Score:2)
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Re:RPN shell! Okay, lemme think... (Score:2)
I do not want a key anywhere on my "LinuxCalc" labelled "rm". Two keystrokes is the absolute minimum that I want to type to remove anything!
Re:Calculator to end all calculators? (Score:2)
I certainly agree with your statement. However, 99% of the population is a mere download away from being able to MP3-encode a self-recorded .wav, while other formats are not quite as accessible to the general public. That alone gives MP3s at least a little bit of an advantage.
Re:Calculator to end all calculators? (Score:2)
keyboard is specialized. I know, there's that little numeric thingy on the right, but it's still hard to use. Where's the parenthesis, exponentiation, integration, log, trig, and other buttons?
the keyboard is right next to the screen. Also, any program needs either mouse or typing to do anything interesting, and shifting b/w the little keypad and the full keyboard is a pain.
performance: Even if you write a good math software package for a PDA, a large part of that calculator's price tag goes to developing a very FAST math package. I tried writing some of it over, and it went SLOW. Palm doesn't want to add $10 to the list price so their PDA can integrate effectively. HP is fine adding $10 to list so it can do appointments, MP3, and other features, because people will pay for that (and the 66MHz processor).
lastly, anyone know how long the batteries last? My 92 runs 6mo at my usage pattern on 4AA. That's a lot of hours.
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Good for language + music studies too! (Score:2)
The most likely tutorial application will probably be in natural language courses, but there is an even more appropriate one for which calculation and sound are necessary partners: computer music + sound sythesis design and performance. It's a mathematical subject that benefits greatly from graphic representation and obviously requires sound as well. This new HP sounds like an ideal portable tool for studies in this area.
Re:Calculator to end all calculators? (Score:2)
He meant integrate, as in calculus, which is something TI and HP calculators do quite well. While there is no reason why a symbolic math program couldn't be written for a Palm Pilot, I haven't seen one -- it would be considerbly harder to write than trivial unit conversion programs.
Re:Reverse Polish Notation? (Score:2)
Calculator to end all calculators? (Score:4)
Secondly, PalmPilots, et al. are really the calculators to end all calculators anyway. Why buy a piece of hardware that only does one thing, when you could have one that runs whatever calculator software you like and a bunch of other stuff too. Want a calculator that uses infix notation? Install this application. Prefer RPN? Use this other program. Hell, use them both!
The days of dedicated hardware are gone. Even game consoles can do other things besides play games.
Linux on an HP calculator (Score:4)
MyCalc%> mv file1 file2
error: argument missing
MyCalc%> file1 file2 mv
MyCalc%> cat
cut: error: argument "|" is invalid
(I was going to re-write that in RPN, but I can't even figure out how pipelining would work--so forget it)
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Back in the days of the TI-85 . . . (Score:2)
Slightly more seriously (and I say slightly with a reason) has anyone ever considered a fully scientific/graphing calc program for a handheld? It would seem that, with the right software, the removal of the linear input requirements would help your IO. Of course, I'm not sure if the average Palm has enough muscle to push out that kind of processing, and this Xpander [ticalc.org] almost certainly has a high-level math-optimized instruction set or coprocessor.
Oh how I pine for the days of yore, when we wrote real code on a numeric keypad (with trig functions for added fun!) and our upgrades to 20 mHz made us demigods.
Oh no! (Score:2)
Re:Calculator to end all calculators? (Score:2)
Also, my HP calculator has a physical interface that makes it faster to use. It has keys, (and very good quality keys at that). Plenty of keys. A stylus interface can't compete with that. At least not nowadays.
Sure, they are all computers. PDAs, calculators, laptops. It is not about the CPUs, the amount of memory etc. It is about the software they run and the kind of use their physical interface is best suited for.
The Palm Pilot is a poor substitute for my HP 48SX. (It is an even poorer substitute for my girlfriend's HP 48GX).
Re:Calculator to end all calculators? (Score:2)
Personally, I want an electronic equivilent to my leatherman multi-tool -- I'd want it to be able to function as a packet analyzer/sniffer, multimeter, and oscilliscope (maybe), as well having a graphing calculator and PDA functionality. If somebody came out with somthing that did all of this (or even a sizeable fraction), I'd plunk down some serious coin without hesitation. If it can play MP3's and replace my remote controls too, that's icing on the cake. Talk about the ultimate geek toy... [leatherman.co.uk]
"The axiom 'An honest man has nothing to fear from the police'
Re:A grey area... (Score:2)
Any more info? (Score:2)
Shades of grey? (Score:3)
256 colours are far better than 256 greys, simply because they are easier to distinguish. This is what graphing calculators have needed for a long time, and there still aren't enough of them to do it.
And am I the only one who thinks the MP3 paying is a bit over the top? If I wanted an MP3 player I'd buy a Rio. A Calculator is for mathematics. Try to move to an all-purpose device and all to often you get something which doesn't perform any of its tasks particularly well...
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Straight from the horse's mouth (Score:3)
Re:Kraftwerk (Score:2)
At the very beginning of that trend, some calculators supplied a "special key" that would generate a random 8-digit number and play it.
I don't know for sure, but I suspect the audio in that song sampled just such a calculator.