Domain: velcro.com
Stories and comments across the archive that link to velcro.com.
Comments · 17
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Re:don't be a chump
Brands are often used misleadingly but that's not true for "velcro". As far as I can tell Velcro the company doesn't sell any product that don't utilize Velcro the stuff. The only difference I see between the the the first link and yours is (a) you have to cut it yourself and (b) it's green.
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Re:"professional-level", what do you mean?Velcro and tang started out as "professional grade equiptment" for putting a man on the moon and trickled down.
I don't know about Tang, but Velcro's history is not related to NASA:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Velcro
http://www.velcro.com/about/history.html -
Re:MS keeps innovating in their spin
Er
... you are joking, right? I can't quite tell: American irony is a bit too subtle for me sometimes. For the record, velcro was invented in the 1940s in Switzerland, space pens were offered to NASA by Fisher out of the blue, without any commission or R&D on NASA's part ... but I've never heard of Tang. What is it? -
Re:Three kinds of Free now.if you've ever
... used the fruits of Government Scientific research (velcro, the internet... etc), ...You might want to check your facts there, Admiral. Velcro was invented by an individual, on his own time, investing his own money, in the expectation of making a profit. http://www.velcro.com/about/history.html
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Re:Our tax dollars at work...Remod parent as misinformative.
Carl Sagan, did not like the idea of promoting man exploration because of the spin off arguments. I don't like the idea either.
Velcro is not a NASA spinoff.
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Re:Two cheap solutions
You can now get a roll of 50 Velcro cable ties. I think Home Depot is carrying them for about $5, they're great! Part # 90924, I think.
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Re:Scientific payoff
But they did give us velcro
Are you saying that NASA gave us velcro? A simple search on the web seems to bring up a number of different sites stating a different history.
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Re:VelcroFrom Velcro's website:
In the early 1940's, Swiss inventor George de Mestral went on a walk with his dog... Upon his return home, he noticed that his dog's coat and his pants were covered with cockleburrs. His inventor's curiosity led him to study the burrs under a microscope, where he discovered their natural hook-like shape.
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Re:Too bad
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Re:Too bad
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Re:Too bad
You gotta look UP people! Where do you think Velcro came from?
Velcro was used in space, but it came from a Swiss gentleman's walk in the woods.
And though I agree that space is neat and all, Velcro is actually doing alright for itself in the innovation department.
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Damn the Emperor! -
Where did Velcro come from?
Although the space industry has developed countless technologies used in everyday (and not so everyday) life, Velcro and Tang are not among them.
Velcro history
To see real space based technologies hop over to a this NASA site. -
Re:royaltiesNASA didn't invent Velcro. For an interesting look into the origins of Velcro look here
The name Velcro is a contraction of "velour" and "crochet". The loop side is the "vel", and the hook side is the "cro".
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Re:The UK Government strikes again! :/> Just the materials science aspect of the Apollo programme must have added billions to the economy - Just how much velcro and teflon is sold each year?
Velcro was invented in the 1940's by a Swiss inventor. Not NASA.
Teflon was invented in the 1930's by Dupont. Not NASA.
NASA has a page which lists real spinoffs from Apollo, not urban legends.
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Velcro
If Velcro had been part of the space program, how come it was developed in the 1940s by a Swiss inventor walking his dog?
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I'll tells where the money coulda gone
three words:
deep sea exploration.
If the issue is that NASA generates billions of dollars towards research into novel technologies, and supporting scientists, just about any sort of field will do: the study of breakfast cereal, exploration of the insides of trees, dirt moving, anal spelunking.
After years of NASA launching various types of protoplasm into high orbit, I think that the benefits of the practice are yet to be seen. If anything, humans, and other sorts of animals, being shot into space has been proven to be a monumental waste of time, money, and imagination.
Why not focus on sending people to the bottom of the ocean? If anything, this sort of pointless exploration might actually yield some sort of useful benefits to humans traveling in the sea - an act which takes place millions of times daily. Plus, and I think this is the most fundamental reason that sea exploration is better than space exploration:
deep sea pr0n -
Re:Excellent!
Ever use velcro? It came about because of NASA.
Bzzt! Wrong. See for yourself.