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.
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
Actually, you're not far off. One theory wrt agriculture/civilization gaining widespread acceptance is that beer provided the impetus for organized agriculture. Flour can be made with relatively little grain, but fermentation requires significantly more. In addition to the "obvious" benefits of beer, fermentation did much to purify water for drinking. (Remember that sewer systems and water treatment plants are recent inventions.) While these ancient cultures certainly did not understand why beer was allowing them to live longer on average, it certainly provided an important evolutionary advantage to those societies which drank it in favor of water.
Gates' Law: Every 18 months, the speed of software halves.
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
A sextant, on the other hand, is useful for making astronomical observations of the sort used in navigation. If you ever try using a sextant, however, you will realize that it isn't much good without a nautical almanac or similar table of celestial positions. Back in the old days (indeed, prior to the invention of the sextant itself) one produced these using an astrolabe, which was a combination observing device and mechanical calculator. Apart from enabling one to produce accurate tables for navigation, it also allowed observations an calculations accurate enough to show that the planets couldn't possibly be in circular orbits about the earth, thus paving the way for the Copernican revolution and earning it its spot among my personal top 10 list of the best gadgets of all time.
-r
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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