EconomyLens.com
No Result
View All Result
Saturday, December 6, 2025
  • Home
  • Economy
  • Business
  • Markets
  • Tech
  • Editorials
EconomyLens.com
  • Home
  • Economy
  • Business
  • Markets
  • Tech
  • Editorials
No Result
View All Result
EconomyLens.com
No Result
View All Result
Home Other

Number’s up: Calculators hold out against AI

Natalie Fisher by Natalie Fisher
December 6, 2025
in Other
Reading Time: 7 mins read
A A
0
19
SHARES
235
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Calculators are more affordable than phones, and run on batteries and solar power. ©AFP

Tokyo (AFP) – The humble pocket calculator may not be able to keep up with the mathematical capabilities of new technology, but it will never hallucinate. The device’s enduring reliability equates to millions of sales each year for Japan’s Casio, which is even eyeing expansion in certain regions. Despite lightning-speed advances in artificial intelligence, chatbots still sometimes stumble on basic addition. In contrast, “calculators always give the correct answer,” Casio executive Tomoaki Sato told AFP. But he conceded that calculators could one day go the way of the abacus.

Related

Divided US Fed set for contentious interest rate meeting

Will EU give ground on 2035 combustion-engine ban?

Mixed day for global stocks as market digest huge Netflix deal

Netflix’s Warner Bros. acquisition sparks backlash

Fresh data show US consumers still strained by inflation

“It’s undeniable that the market for personal calculators used in business is on a downward trend,” Sato said in Tokyo. Smartphones and web browsers can handle everyday sums, while AI models achieved gold-level scores for the first time this year at a prestigious global maths contest. But calculators are more affordable than phones and run on batteries and solar power — a plus for schools in developing countries, a potential growth area for Casio, Sato said. And people who do buy calculators prefer the way they feel, he argued.

Thitinan Suntisubpool, co-owner of a shop selling red bags and beckoning cats in Bangkok’s Chinatown, said she loves how durable her big calculator is, having dropped it several times. “It’s more convenient in many ways,” the 58-year-old told AFP. “We can use it to press the numbers and show the customer,” avoiding language-barrier misunderstandings. But at a nearby street stall selling clocks, torches, and calculators, the vendor, who gave her name as Da, said calculator sales were “quiet”.

At a Casio factory in Thailand, assembly line workers slotted green circuit boards into place and popped cuboid buttons labelled “DEL” from a plastic tub onto pastel-blue calculator frames. “Calculators are still in demand,” said Ryohei Saito, a general manager for Casio in Thailand. “Not everywhere in the world has smartphone connectivity, and calculators are optimised tools focused on necessary functions,” he said. In the year to March 2025, Casio sold 39 million calculators, general and scientific, in around 100 countries. That compares to 45 million in 2019-20 but is still up from the 31 million that sold the following year after the Covid-19 pandemic hit.

The company has come a long way from the 1957 invention of the desk-sized “14-A”, which it says was the first compact all-electric calculator. Calculator history even made headlines recently when Christie’s suspended the Paris sale of an early calculating machine, “La Pascaline”, after a court said it could not be taken abroad. The auction house called the ebony-decorated 1642 device “the first attempt in history to substitute the human mind with a machine”. Those attempts have accelerated with AI.

In July, AI models made by Google, OpenAI, and DeepSeek reached gold-level scores at the annual International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO). But neither attained full marks at the annual contest for under-20s, unlike five human participants who achieved perfect scores. IMO president Gregor Dolinar called the progress of artificial intelligence in the field “fascinating”. “When we talk about scientific calculators, in the past you needed them, but nowadays it’s easier to just ask AI,” he told AFP. “If you pose the question in the right way,” artificial intelligence can crunch abstract, logical questions and show how it reached its conclusion, Dolinar said. Dolinar, a professor in engineering at the University of Ljubljana, thinks physical calculators are likely to “slowly disappear”. Something that has already happened for his students. “They can calculate everything on a phone,” he said.

© 2024 AFP

Tags: calculatoreducationtechnology
Share8Tweet5Share1Pin2Send
Previous Post

Divided US Fed set for contentious interest rate meeting

Natalie Fisher

Natalie Fisher

Related Posts

Other

Stocks consolidate as US inflation worries undermine Fed rate hopes

December 5, 2025
Other

Stocks rise as investors look to more Fed rate cuts

December 5, 2025
Other

Netflix to buy Warner Bros. in deal of the decade

December 6, 2025
Other

Softbank’s Son says super AI could make humans like fish, win Nobel Prize

December 5, 2025
Other

Mixed day for US equities as Japan’s Nikkei rallies

December 4, 2025
Other

Facebook ‘supreme court’ admits ‘frustrations’ in 5 years of work

December 4, 2025
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

New York ruling deals Trump business a major blow

September 30, 2024

Elon Musk’s X fights Australian watchdog over church stabbing posts

April 21, 2024

Women journalists bear the brunt of cyberbullying

April 22, 2024

France probes TotalEnergies over 2021 Mozambique attack

May 6, 2024

New York ruling deals Trump business a major blow

79

Ghanaian finance ministry warns against fallout from anti-LGBTQ law

74

Shady bleaching jabs fuel health fears, scams in W. Africa

71

Stock markets waver, oil prices edge up

65

Number’s up: Calculators hold out against AI

December 6, 2025

Divided US Fed set for contentious interest rate meeting

December 6, 2025

Will EU give ground on 2035 combustion-engine ban?

December 6, 2025

Mixed day for global stocks as market digest huge Netflix deal

December 6, 2025
EconomyLens Logo

We bring the world economy to you. Get the latest news and insights on the global economy, from trade and finance to technology and innovation.

Pages

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us

Categories

  • Business
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Tech
  • Editorials

Network

  • Coolinarco.com
  • CasualSelf.com
  • Fit.CasualSelf.com
  • Sport.CasualSelf.com
  • SportBeep.com
  • MachinaSphere.com
  • MagnifyPost.com
  • TodayAiNews.com
  • VideosArena.com
© 2025 EconomyLens.com - Top economic news from around the world.
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Economy
  • Business
  • Markets
  • Tech
  • Editorials

© 2024 EconomyLens.com - Top economic news from around the world.