Top 10 Gadgets of All Time
pulski sent in MSNBC's list of the top 10 gadgets of all time. It's a fairly interesting list, although I think some of the more ancient gadgets were overlooked - cutting tools, dams and other fundamentals of civilized life.
Was I the only person that found the inclusion of the electric hand dryer on that list funny? I don't see why you all took it so seriously, especially considering the source...
Two very important gadgets. I don't have any special insight into the history of exploration, but I would bet that the Europeans couldn't have conquered so much of the globe without these.
It is tempting, if the only tool you have is a hammer, to treat everything as if it were a nail. - Abraham Maslow
Now, since we've had so few millennia since we've started counting, we're still fixated on making it start with year 1 AD. But with decades, there's been so damn many of them, we don't really care about making it line up at the beginning. So it's more convenient to count the ones that make the pretty numbers line up.
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The filters clog with dust, warm air from the dryer rises and warms up the dust, germs breed, and you get a stream of air that is thick with germs onto your wet hands. Luvly!
Indeed, it's a poor choice. A much better one would have been the musical condom (US patent # ... I'm too lazy to find it back), soon to be superseded by the TALKING condom (patent pending).
The definitive top ten gadget list of all time? I don't think so.
Other than an extreme bias for the past century, your list achieves nothing other than taking up space on a page.
Three different pairs of items on your list serve identical functions. The transistor is just a vacuum tube which uses quantum mechanics instead of electrical properties. Isn't the telephone just another way to telegraph a person's voice? Radio and television use an identical technology to do basically the same thing.
Electric hand dryers? I'm incredulous! Aren't these the insidious things found in public washrooms on Interstates and fast food restaurants which use several amps of power to not quite completely dry people's hands? For crissake. You could run an electric chair on that much power! If they work so damned well, why don't people have them in their homes? They don't because they don't. Bah!! Idiocy!
You didn't work very hard on this list did you Mr. Krakow?
I hope people use your list as a firestarter at the earliest opportunity.
Without even exercising my brain cells too much I can come up with a far more representative list. As far as the impact on the history of mankind, here are the gadgets that make up my list.
Here they are, fast and dirty:
That's it. Please comment.
They put the transistor and the vacuum tube in the same list. Both of those devices can be used for the same thing. Sure there's differences, but those are just minor details.
My list, not in any order:
1) the Turing machine
2) wheel
3) fire
4) reaction engine (rocket)
5) internal combustion engine
6) the escapement on clocks
7) moveable type printing press
8) vacuum tube
9) gunpowder
10) algebra
If tits were wings it'd be flying around.
Indoor plumbing has been in rich people's houses
in some of the oldest cities dug up.
But its popularity really picked up when someone
discoer a u-shaped kink in the pipes would
prevent smelly backups in rather recent history.
I read somewhere (don't remember where, and I don't have a link) that these electric hot air driers actually increase the level of bacteria on a persons hand by 400 percent ! So instead of washing your hands, you're infecting them. Apparently the hot and moist air in these things is the perfect breeding ground...
And besides that, the guy writing the article wishes us a 'Happy New Millennium'... sorry, one year too early, my friend.
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so the civilizations of ancient Rome, China, Persia, Inca, etc. and modern civilizations like the British Empire were the size of small city states?
No, but many if not all of them (Rome and London for sure) had sanitation. I'm not talking elaborate sewage-treatment methods, but some system of canals or ducts or something to keep the sewage away from the drinking water.
up until the 1900s all civilizations used the same form of waste disposal: dump it in the nearest river.
That's the same river they drink from and bathe in. That system works for low population densities (most of those ancient empires would have been low-density). But for the empires' urban administrative centers, sanitation becomes vital.
Birth control is just what it sounds like - control over whether and when to give birth. It includes such things as abortion and even fertility treatments, which do nothing to prevent (the latter may even encourage) conception.
Contraception includes only those birth control methods which work by preventing conception. It includes methods like abstainance, chemicals like "the pill", and gadgets like condoms and IUDs.
Did birth control really free half the population to "reliably join the work force?"
Depends on which work force. Throughout most of history, women of childbearing age have worked. They have worked whether or not they had young children. The babies and/or children accompanied their mothers as they worked. This tended to keep women out of jobs that required a lot of travel, or long hours without a break, or dangerous (to children if not adults) conditions. With a few exceptions, it was the same work men did. For most men and women, work meant farming. With the industrial revolution, more jobs required long hours away from home, and women (esp. those with children) were largely excluded.
Why is artificial contraception necessary to hold down a job?
It's not. But without it, most women of childbearing age would be effectively kept out of most jobs. Exceptions would be women who remain childless, either by choice or by biology. Birth control (including contraception) vastly increases the jobs available to women. And it's all but neccesary for survival in a world where most children survive to adulthood. Without some kind of birth control, it's not all that unusual for a woman to have a dozen kids in a lifetime. This might have been a good thing when most of the kids died in infancy, but if we're going to have nice things like low infant mortality, we're going to have to breed less kids. That means birth control, whether by low-tech methods like abstainance (how many guys are going to applaud that decision?) or inventions like pills, condoms, and abortions.
Perhaps things like maternity laws and day care would better qualify under that criteria.
What criteria? Those are even less like gadgets than birth control is. Maternity laws and day care are nice things, but they're hardly necessary for women to enter the work force. Like birth control, they broaden the choices available to women, but in the absence of birth control, they become quite unworkable. Who's going to grant maternity leave to someone every time they get knocked up, just because they won't use some kind of birth control? Who's going to pay for day care for a dozen or so kids?
Not just indoor plumbing, but outdoor plumbing as well, was vital for civilization. Without proper waste disposal, civilizations would not advance beyond the size of a smallish city/state before disease brought the whole works crashing down. Proper waste disposal is easy in low-density rural populations (the old open-holer was quite adequate for disposal of small amounts of sewage) but for larger cities it becomes quite a problem. Grand projects - even gadgets - are developed to deal with it.
Indoor plumbing is one form of this in the same way that the Zippo lighter is one form of portable fire. Sewage sanitation definitely belongs on the top 10 list!
Okay... maybe not.
:)
The article was about the author's perspective of what was important to him. Not necessarily society. If this is the case, then it stands to reason that the author may be more boring than myself!
It also makes me wonder what I would have done without some things like the combustible engine,
toilet paper (not until the 1800's... can you belive it?), ramen noodles, and of course, the
crybaby and wah-wah guitar pedals used by Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton and Pete Townshend.
Seriously, though-
The list in this thread goes to show that indeed, we wouldn't last a nano-second in the 18th century. No wonder we make Luddites sick!
The fractional horsepower electric motor. (spurred what is called the second industrial revolution)
The horse collar. (needed because of a labor shortage caused by the black plague). Advanced the standard of living in Europe immensely.
The chimney. (Made use of fire indoors possible - made cities practical)
The moldboard plow. (made planting the US midwest possible)
The Browning Automatic Rifle. (Invented prior to WWI, was so far in advance of anything else that the Army wouldn't equip soldiers going to Europe with it for fear Germans would copy it. US soldiers instead got crappy French machine gun that jammed and didn't have interchangable parts until Army wised up. The BAR design was still in use essentially unchanged in the Korean War).
NMR - see inside stuff on several scales; made modern chemistry possible by unambiguously identifying molecular structures. Same principle is used in MRI to view inside people.
Fourdriner paper machine - makes high volume production of paper cheap. A modern Fourdriner spits out paper 20' wide at 80 miles per hour when fed ground up tree parts suspended in water at back end.
Concrete - without it Rome would have been impossible.
THE
Static Byte Dwinkelizer!
Woohoo!
If you hate him for posting a link to eToys, you'll probably hate me even more when I note that you can get these for only $6.75 (!! They are $30 at eToys!!) at Amazon... Or use the 110% price match at eToys to really stick it to the evil toy company!!! We ordered ten for our pre-new year's Armageddon Nerf War at work.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Yes the phone has had a big impact on our lives, but it's a fairly recent invention and I see it disappearing quickly.. at least in the analog form we know. In the grand scheme of things, the phone is just a novelty that just lasted a bit longer than the telegraph. I think we will always have something called "the phone," but you won't have a "phone line."
-- Virtual Windows Project
Where on this list of the top gadgets is the Transcapacitor? This is going to change everything.
Did birth control really free half the population to "reliably join the work force?"
Yes. It's not just a matter of being able to "return" to a job after a pregnancy, but also to be depended on to work straight for years at a time if necessary.
Perhaps things like maternity laws and day care would better qualify under that criteria.
These still have to take into account the 6-9 weeks that a woman is physically unable to work for 8 hours a day (for most of them, some don't need to stop). Birth control means that, if a woman chooses, she can avoid pregnancy (and therefore forced in-home time) and stay working consistently at a job for an arbitrarily long length of time.
As for sparking the "sexual revolution," what is that, exactly? Really, what does it mean?
It was equality for women. Before the pill, if a one-nite stand occured, it was the women who bore sole responsibility for anything spawned at the time. That is the same, mostly, but after the pill a women could, arguably, protect herself from unwanted pregnancy, and was there fore "free" to explore her sexuality in any way she wished without fear of conception. This kind of thinking, women are free to explore sexuality, was a revolution in this county. Especially when one considers the contrast of the straight-laced (and boring as hell, IMHO) nature of the 50s and the hippie, pot-smoking, acid-dropping, free-love, ride that was the 60s. 'Course I wasn't born till '74, so this is all pre-mystory to me...
+&x
Except that the wheel has an Axle - Log Rollers don't.
CORRECT. Johnny, tell this man what he has won...
The great advancement with the wheel was the axle. There were 'rolly' type things before, but it was the axle that made wheels useful.
Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
In no order...
1.) Refridgeration systems
2.) Toilet/sewage systems
3.) The Lightbulb
Those are some of the many things us humans depend on, and deserve recognition for their purpose and for their inventors.
-PovRayMan
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Check out my blackbox styles
Subject says it all.
Bread is tasty, portable and relatively spoil proof.
The lever was probably invented before the wheel.
Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
Refrigeration granted the ability to ship food products all over the world by rail, road, air, or sea and have them arrive as edible food.
It also allowed people to store food for longer periods of time.
And, finally, it led to air conditioners - refrigeration for entire buildings!
I'd rather kill an old ceral box (recycling) than look like I dont know how to use the bathroom right.
Damn straight! Hell, I'd kill a spotted owl and dry my hands on that before I'd use an electric hand drier - they suck!!!
Websters definition:
gadget - an often small mechanical or electronic device with a practical use but often thought of as a novelty.
How about the TV remote?
okay english teacher in me coming out...
Brand name is definiteky LEGO
Piece of plastic with holes and dimples: a LEGO piece or ONE LEGO?
If you open a LEGO box and dump it in a bowl, which of the following would you say.
a) the bowl contains MUCH lego.
b) the bowl contains many legos.
IF LEGO can be counted, then it is a countable noun. Regardless of the brand name, I say that LEGO pieces can be counted. Witness the guides that show how MANY LEGO PIECES you need of each type in each step.
So, the real issue is not wheter LEGO peices can be counted, but wheter it's more correct to say "I have 6 lego pieces" or "I have 6 LEGOs"
Personally, I think that common usage wins out for LEGOs.
Can't believe he missed duct tape.
Also add Swiss Army knives (or your favorite variant).
BitPoet
Easy one.. Coffee machine.. it's simple, it's handy, it's essential :) and I must admit that the shoe was a pretty decent idea too
//rdj
No one can understand the truth until he drinks of coffee's frothy goodness.
--Sheikh Abd-Al-Kadir, 1587
Kill two birds with one stone. Clear your nasal passages and show your distaste for paper towel-less bathrooms.
Blow your nose on the electric hand dryer.
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Win dain a lotica, en vai tu ri silota
Sliced bread is the greatest or so I have been told.
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This list was so out of touch with reality and chillingly useless I was surprised A.C. Clarke didn't write it.
What ever happened to the printing press. Can't see the library from all the stacked books eh?
I'd love to meet him and shake his hand. Maybe his hand is lukewarm, clammy, and moist after using the dryer too!
Although I think the list should either pick between the transistor or the tube and between the telegraph and telephone she does make a point with the hand dryer.
Its an amazing device because of its popularity and acceptance into mainstream culture if you consider that it doesn't work. Not at all.
Its brought back the simple and elegant act of wiping your hands right on your pants. What could be more eco-smart and efficient. Its a deterant to using paper not a hand dryer. Most people change their pants every day so this primitive system remains safe and clean in our age of germs.
Many 'primitive' cultures wipe a lot more than just their hands onto their clothing and they're better off for it. Someday the big advancement will not be the wearable computer but the Bounty-suit quick picker upper. Only after we've achieved this next evolution in fashion will society aspire to its greatest creation - a wearable computer that cleans and wipes even the filthiest technophile.
Where's A.C. Clarke when you need him?
I have to pity the write of this article, and his obvious passive-aggressive hand washing fetish. Who else would include the electric hand-dryer on a 'Top 10 gadgets of all time' list, omitting both the light bulb AND the electric espresso maker?
Owner of a caffeine fetish and proud of it.
.sig: Now legally binding!
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My mom's going to kick you in the face!
The wheel was fine for awhile but now it's similar to a sharp rock as a knife - it's outdated and ill-suited to the demands of todays transportation needs. However, we're locked into its use for the time being if only for the way it's held our imagination captive on this front.
Now don't get me wrong - circles are a very important development in other areas, one of which the author mentioned - as gears, specifically. With the circle came ideas of continuous motion or action as well as higher, non-mechanical ideas (i.e. round earth, time, returning karma, you get the idea.)
IMHO paper has to be on that list. It has definitely played a major part in the invention of everything else in the list except the wheel. Electric hand dryer I can live without, paper, hmm...
Gadgets are typically things that perform some useful function, but are considered "cool" or "novel". The wheel is an important advance but it's not a gadget in any sense of the word. Electronic organizers are gadgets (although I wouldn't say top 10); those little electronic stud finders you hold up to the wall, that's a gadget. James Bond's laser watch, now THAT'S a gadget.
--- Dirtside | "Spirituality" is the irrational belief in the supernatural
"Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
By far, the greatest invention of all time.
And for all you dufae who complain about the inclusion of the electric hand dryer over the plow, lightbulb, internal combustion engine, or transcapacator...
--
Casey
More scratches on the cave wall, thanks be to anonymity.
I can't, there's no Zero.
Of course, I hate to be a party pooper, but the invention of beer was simply an extension of a natural process that long predates humanity. Basically, fruit is good for you. After a certain amount of time, fruit ferments. This releases the pungent odour of alcohol, and attracts creatures of all kinds to feed and get merrily drunk. Hence at certain times of year birds fly into walls, fruit bats fall out of trees and elephants are definitely to be avoided. The flavour of alcohol is intrinsically attractive to us - and without it, beer is not. (Have you ever tried non-alcoholic beer - yeargghhhh!) In fact, in moderation, alcohol is good for you - 'moderate' or 'social' drinkers live significantly longer than the teatotal. So think on this next time you're down the pub with your mates.
"What is freedom of expression? Without the freedom to offend, it ceases to exist." Salman Rushdie
Ok fire I can agree with, but the telephone, telegraph, television? Bah! For one week, share a bucket in your living room with family and friends for waste disposal, live without everything except fire on this top ten list, and then tell me: who's your daddy now, television or toilet? Thought so.
And all such optical goodies, but especially eyeglasses. I, for one, would be in a bad way without mine, and I bet they originally had a gadgety air to them. Matches: Earlier than the Zippo lighter, and more universal. The ballpoint pen. The definition of "gadget" is definitely a problem -- like the contact lens, it appears to be in the eye of the beholder.
OK, now what?
I'll say this. Some of these were good (portable fire, telephone) but some were just downright stupid (Cough Electric Hand Dryer Cough). Now, in the event that this was a TRUE gadget list, I might agree with that. But with Portable Fire and Vacuum Tube, the author obviously strayed away from the point a bit and made it more like "The Top 10 Really Handy and Vital Things of all Time" list. Going back to the original gadget list, I'd do this, in no particular order:
;P
10. Mirror- How handy is this, without it, we'd never truly have a look at ourselves, until many years later with the development of the.....
9. Camera/Camcorder- Used to capture memories straight from time. Speaking of time....
8. Clock/Portable Watch- I don't know about you, but I could not live without my watch, used to so diligently tell the time. Simple as that.
7. Television- I won't change this, TV is pretty cool. I mean, no one can disagree with the fact TV is the old fashioned center of our world before the computer.
6. Video Game Consoles- Took the TV one step further and made it psuedo interactive. Some say it rots the mind, but in general, people love it and still do as a great alternative to possibly hard to setup computer games.
5. Those Hand-Held Fan things- Now, who hasn't encountered one of these before? This is truly a gadget keeping you cool at the flip of a switch.
4. CD/CD Player- Now this was good, an easy way to keep songs, better than bulky 8-tracks/cassettes/whatever, and were more durable and lasted longer. Data for computers could also be stored here and all was good.
3. Cell Phone- Just like a watch intergrated with a telephone, Cell Phones now enabled you talk to anywhere and anytime you felt like it.
2. Flashlight- Portable light anymore, poof, you want light you got it. It's all right there.
1. Hair Dryer- You may disagree, but for me, this one console harnesses electricity, wind, and heat to handle situations of excess moisture.
My top 10 inventions of All Time (in no particular order, historical or preferential):
It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
Face it, we're lazy, and what better way to be lazy then to let some computer control exactly how fast our wheels spin. Not only that, but it's fun to watch people freak out when you pass them with your legs crossed on the dash.
Portable fire was great
How did I learn Morse Code? I had one of those cheap walkie-talkies with Morse Code on it. It was so much fun pressing that little red button that made the annoying beep, so annoying in fact, that my parents will never let me near anything that makes noise again!
If it wasn't for this little device, Doom and deathmatch would never have become as popular they are, and id Software would never be as close as they are to world domination (move over Redhat)!
All right, technically, this isn't a gadget, but who would've known that an actual moth would've climbed inside one of those mothers and caused so many problems? And now, us IT professionals have yet another excuse to pull the systems offline for, what else, playing deathmatch.
Leave it to the tiny transistor to allow us to have portable music. Where would America's youth be today without those headphones covering their ears and allowing them to completely drown out the wise words of their elder statesmen? They certainly wouldn't be leading the computing world, now would they?
They may not technically be radios, but certainly the idea of wireless communication culminates in those annoying little devices that give some people a reason to drive poorly and others a reason to say that everyone is going to die of brain cancer. Plus, you can play games on some of them now! Can anyone say 'deathmatch'?
Whoa Nelly! The Nintendo made console gaming fun again and gave us yet another mindless, brainless activity to do with our televisions.
Computers are great, but small computers are better, because they can become as portable as cell phones while becoming ten times more useful. The idea that the computer could become as important a tool for everyday life as the pen started with the idea of taking it all with you, and the Palm Pilot embodies that spirit.
Again, technically, not a gadget, but really, when you're done with that hand-dryer thingie (which honestly, really never does work), where do you wipe your hands?
NOTE: This post not for the humor (or humour) impaired.
...has to be a cutting device that is at least 4000 years old.
It's called the "Plow".
-soup (GNUrd, Speaker to Machines) "Laugh at yourself- Why should everyone else have all the fun?" -Romanchek's 6th Ru
not to mention the fact that it is easily surpassed in usability (time to dry hands), portability, cost, and just about everything else, by a simple paper towel. Electric hand dryers are a good example of technology gone way too far. Electric HAIR dryers, OTOH (for women) have been a godsend. Now it only takes women 2 hours to get ready, instead of the pre-historic 4.
+&x
But the electric hand drier? they don't even work right. Although I did once see one of those optically trigered ones with a sign "for a word from place 1$ in the slot below" .... it sounded just like him
I can't believe contraception was not on the list. It seems to me that birth control (specifically, the pill and other "drug" methods) freed half of the population to more reliably join the work force along with sparking the sexual revolution. I would think such an impact would qulify this. Of course, it is no electric hand dryer (which I am hoping was added as a pathetic attempt at comedy).
Jeremy
1) one, one 'cause you left me.
2) two two for my family.
3) three three for my heartache.
4) four four for my headache.
5) five five for my lonley.
6) six six for my sorrow.
7) seven seven no tomorrow.
8) eight eight I forget what eight was for.
9) nine nine cause I've lost god.
10) ten ten ten ten for everything everything.
_________________________
The one person in the world that actually likes hand dryers! Clearly the man should be stuffed and put in a museum somewhere.
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Ever try to blow your nose with one of those? A curse on bathroom designers who leave out the paper towels.
Erector sets with motor: to heck with Mindstorms. I was building destructor the robot with this thing when I could barely walk. That was a concept ahead of it's time.
Here's a great quote: "The first artificial heart constructed at Yale was powered by an Erector Set motor."
The remote control: Let's face it. We still don't need the dang thing and we couldn't live without it. It fits the definition perfectly.
No Zen is good zen
So what does count? The hand dryer, while not one of my top choices, is definitely gadgety. The television and computer and radio have moved out of gadget status, but certainly started that way.
What else? Digital watches. Palm Pilots. Viewmaster. Gyroscopes. Those little models of the solar system which have all the planets geared so they can all rotate and revolve at the proper relative speeds.
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