I always find it fun to see how tech has evolved.
Back in the 60's, my mom worked at a bank where they had a state of the art Burrows that she used to balance the books. The thing was the size of a kitchen counter... And it probably could be run from an Arduino nowadays.
On YouTube there's a guy who just did a comparison between the Cray 1 and an iPhone. Guess which one is the most powerful?
Fall 1970, senior year of HS: my math teacher rolls an AV cart into the room with a typewriter-size device hidden under a sheet. "Kids, I'm going to show you the future" as he removes the sheet to unveil a four-function plus square root calculator with 8 nixie tubes and a paper tape printer. "And it's only $1500!" ($12k in current dollars). By the time I graduated in June '71, TI, National Semiconductor, Bowmar and others had handheld calculators with segmented LED displays selling in the $100-ish range if memory serves.
Fast forward to 1976 and I'm working in the camera department of a local membership retailer. In June, we had a competitive handheld calc with decent functionality selling for about $50. By Christmas, there was a stack of unsellable stock on a table priced at $4.99. Absolutely wild times.