<Tr> <Td> </Td> <Td> This lead section's tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia . See Wikipedia's guide to writing better articles for suggestions . (February 2017) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) </Td> </Tr> <P> The Ancient Romans developed the Roman hand abacus, a portable, but less capable, base - 10 version of earlier abacuses like those used by the Greeks and Babylonians . It was the first portable calculating device for engineers, merchants and presumably tax collectors . It greatly reduced the time needed to perform the basic operations of arithmetic using Roman numerals . </P> <P> As Karl Menninger says on page 315 of his book, "For more extensive and complicated calculations, such as those involved in Roman land surveys, there was, in addition to the hand abacus, a true reckoning board with unattached counters or pebbles . The Etruscan cameo and the Greek predecessors, such as the Salamis Tablet and the Darius Vase, give us a good idea of what it must have been like, although no actual specimens of the true Roman counting board are known to be extant . But language, the most reliable and conservative guardian of a past culture, has come to our rescue once more . Above all, it has preserved the fact of the unattached counters so faithfully that we can discern this more clearly than if we possessed an actual counting board . What the Greeks called psephoi, the Romans called calculi . The Latin word calx means' pebble' or' gravel stone'; calculi are thus little stones (used as counters)." </P> <P> Both the Roman abacus and the Chinese suanpan have been used since ancient times . With one bead above and four below the bar, the systematic configuration of the Roman abacus is coincident to the modern Japanese soroban, although the soroban is historically derived from the suanpan . </P>

Who uses the roman abacus during 2400 b.c