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Pussy Calculator is a two-part zine
I wrote half in the spring of 2010 while I was working the 5am shift at Lund's [a high-end grocery store in Minneapolis]. Each entry was written on a piece of receipt paper from my register and scribed into this zine.
The other part came about because my step-dad sent me an entire album's worth of photographs that my mom had collected of all of the cat's that I have had throughout my childhood. I had no freaking clue what I was going to do with all of these old cat pictures so I comprised them into this zine. There are little stories of each of the cat's and some fun illustrations.
There were so many cat pictures that as a bonus feature to buying this zine you get your own personal picture to keep and frame in your house with a little story on the back.
ALSO in addition to all of the above this zine comes with a mini-zine that my home-boy made while I was putting together the final pieces of 'Pussy Calculator' when we were hanging out one day. He used a handful of pictures from my cat collection that I was sent to make a mini-story called 'Rupert & Sgt. Paws - A 'tail' of 2 best fwends' It is a must read.
Dudes this is the mother-load of zines.
Pussy Calculator comes bound a few different ways I tried to show the different ways in the picture, so that is also a surprise within a surprise as to which way you will get your 'Pussy Calculator'
This zine is 24-pages printed on both sides in black and white, and will be sure to make you smile!
I love trades!
Texas Instruments calculators from the 1970s. TI-1250, TI-1200, SR-50A, SR-11, the TI Programmer, and the TI-59 programmable.
Macro shot of a calculator, released under a CC-license for all your math / study illustration needs. Pictured is a Casio fx-991ES calculator that has gotten me through meny tough tests.
Be sure to provide credit to "Boaz Arad" and a link back to www.boazarad.com or www.luxphile.com
If used, I'd love to hear about it!
6
As I increasingly spend my time goofing around the house, and with friends, my study equipment gathers dust....
(man..i hate exams!)
Listed in the Complete Collector's Guide to Pocket Calculators by Guy Ball and Bruce Flamm, Copyright 1979.
Pussy Calculator is a two-part zine
I wrote half in the spring of 2010 while I was working the 5am shift at Lund's [a high-end grocery store in Minneapolis]. Each entry was written on a piece of receipt paper from my register and scribed into this zine.
The other part came about because my step-dad sent me an entire album's worth of photographs that my mom had collected of all of the cat's that I have had throughout my childhood. I had no freaking clue what I was going to do with all of these old cat pictures so I comprised them into this zine. There are little stories of each of the cat's and some fun illustrations.
There were so many cat pictures that as a bonus feature to buying this zine you get your own personal picture to keep and frame in your house with a little story on the back.
ALSO in addition to all of the above this zine comes with a mini-zine that my home-boy made while I was putting together the final pieces of 'Pussy Calculator' when we were hanging out one day. He used a handful of pictures from my cat collection that I was sent to make a mini-story called 'Rupert & Sgt. Paws - A 'tail' of 2 best fwends' It is a must read.
Dudes this is the mother-load of zines.
Pussy Calculator comes bound a few different ways I tried to show the different ways in the picture, so that is also a surprise within a surprise as to which way you will get your 'Pussy Calculator'
This zine is 24-pages printed on both sides in black and white, and will be sure to make you smile!
I love trades!
It works! It has a rom drawer with some interesting looking ROMs, 16kB RAM card, HPIB, and GPIO card, plus a spare NIB GPIO card came with it and some NIB paper rolls.
Hewlett Packard 35 calculator. The HP35 was HP's first handheld calculator, and the first handheld calculator by any manufacturer to have scientific functions. It was the calculator that brought the demise of the humble slide rule. Although in 1972 at US$400, there were not cheap at the time.
This HP has a broken display.
Early Sharp pocket computers: EL-5100 (not really a pocket computer, but an early high-end scientific programmable), PC-1211 and later PC-1212. Note the change in LCD display. The earlier yellow displays were prone to damage and leaking.
Vintage Lloyd's Accumatic 907 calculator from around 1974. This one has the mysterious orange minus key.