Friday, January 6, 2012

How Casio Pathfinder Became a Part of Casios Family

The Casio Pathfinder collection of action wristwatches are tough and durable for operations in the field with a rich feature-set of practical instruments built in, such as altimeters, barometers, compasses, and thermometers to help gauge oncoming weather, fix your position, or plan your route. Quartz and atomic movements are both built in, as are rechargeable battery power and long-lasting solar power. As Casio produced stronger quality wristbands they have also updated their older equipment and have evolved them using new technology and components.

A Casio Pathfinder is also water resistant, has a depth gauge, tide and moon-phase readings, or sunrise and sunset data. This is similar to that of the G Shock and Solar family but with slight difference concerning the amount of damage or punishment it can handle. Titanium casing, stainless steel housing, and resin wristbands are among the other traits in this line of practical utilitarian timepieces. A Casio Pathfinder wristwatch boasts powerful triple-sensor technology, duplex LCD screens, and automatic electroluminescence. It's designed for outdoor adventures and sports but is equally suitable for the types of tactical situations commonly faced by uniformed personnel such as rescue workers and police and military forces.


Rugged and dependable, Pathfinders are heirs to a legacy of technological excellence, for Casio has long been a global leader in the consumer electronics industry. From humble beginnings as a successful manufacturer of cigarette lighter rings (that's right, rings that produce a little flame for lighting cigarettes - this is Japan, after all, a land of smokers and gizmos), Casio went on to invent the first-ever compact all-electric calculator in 1957. Not long thereafter they created the world's first graphing calculator, and have been busy making a line of innovative products ever since, like the market's first digital cameras to use an LCD screen.


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