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12 Digits Desktop Calculator with Large LCD Display and Sensitive Button, for Home, Office, School, Class and Business, 4 Function Small Basic Calculators for Desk (Blue)

(3 customer reviews)

$12.99

  • Turned head design:The tilted head design of the display screen allows you to see the numbers directly when you lean on a chair and use it directly, and you can see the results without having to lower your head
  • Mobile phone holder function:Can be used as a mobile phone holder for watching movies
  • ABS Plastic:This large calculator is made of ABS high strength engineering plastics, light weight but durable. It can withstand the impact of falling on the height of the desktop for several times
  • Large responsive buttons:Spacious button sizes ensure that your fingers are much less likely to hit the wrong number, all while providing a satisfying sensation when typing
  • Multi-function Hand Calculator: The ten key calculator includes basic addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division functions for daily use in taxation, billing, office work, and studying.PLEASE NOTE: The calculator will turn itself off after about 6 minutes of being idle
Category:

Additional information

Product Dimensions

1 x 1 x 0.04 inches

Item Weight

6.4 ounces

Item model number

002

Batteries

1 AAA batteries required. (included)

Date First Available

September 19, 2024

Manufacturer

Holotioee

Country of Origin

China

3 reviews for 12 Digits Desktop Calculator with Large LCD Display and Sensitive Button, for Home, Office, School, Class and Business, 4 Function Small Basic Calculators for Desk (Blue)

  1. Dave

    The Holotioee 12 digit desktop calculator is a great basic calculator to have on your desk when you don’t want to rely on the built in calculator on your computer or phone. The calculator securely sits firmly on the desk while you calculate away. Using the provided AAA battery, there’s plenty of power even though the calculator has a built in shut off. For an added benefit, the calculator also doubles as a phone stand in landscape mode. Basic, simple and of quality construction. Even the keystrokes are smooth and accurate. Overall, a basic, but quality calculator at an affordable price.

  2. Jon Caraveo

    This calculator looks and works great on a desk. The colors are accurate to the product photos, and it’ll stand out as an unusual accent on a desk or workspace. The angle of the screen means it’s best placed at the rear of your desk, and the LCD is crisp and easily-readable. The battery lasts basically forever.

  3. Jon Caraveo

    By the holy saints above, this infernal device has shattered my world! ‘Tis called a “calculator,” though it be more fitting to name it “The Devil’s Abacus.” With but a press of buttons, it summoned numbers faster than a village elder recounting the tax rolls. Gone are the days when I counted grain kernels for the lord’s tithe, spilling more on the ground than in my sack. Nay, this accursed thing spews forth sums and tallies with no regard for the honest toil of hands blistered from scratching lines in the dirt. It knew the count of my goats before I did—and without even looking them in the eye! I swear it even suggested that one was missing, though I dared not ask how it knew. Witchcraft, surely.

    But the heresy does not stop there! This “calculator” measures wheat by the bushel, tracks debts down to the last copper farthing, and whispers the weight of my sins (and grain) with unholy precision. Once, it had me convinced I could count to a thousand without needing a single pebble or finger. Preposterous! My wife Martha now accuses me of sorcery, saying my new “magic slate” has ruined the barter economy of the village. The baker won’t trade loaves for an honest handful of flour anymore—he demands exact change! If the devil himself had forged a machine to make me feel both clever and utterly useless at the same time, this would be it. Be warned, fellow peasants: this cursed object will steal your simple joys, like guessing how many eggs your hen has laid without its infernal interference. A pox upon it—and yet… I cannot stop using it.

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