Slashdot Mirror


Top 25 Innovations of the Past 25 Years

HarvardAce writes "CNN has just released a list of 24 of the top 25 innovations of the past 25 years. Most of them are things we use every day in life, such as cell phones (#2), PCs (#3), and e-mail (#5). CNN won't release the #1 innovation until Sunday, January 18 at 8pm EST (Monday, Jan 19 @ 1AM GMT), so I wanted to see if Slashdot users could come up with what they think the #1 innovation is and comment on the rest of the list."

18 of 624 comments (clear)

  1. #1 will be... by waynegoode · · Score: 5, Insightful

    #1 will be The World Wide Web/The Internet.

    1. Re:#1 will be... by PoopJuggler · · Score: 5, Funny

      or the George Foreman Grilling Machine.
      Tough call...

    2. Re:#1 will be... by dspeyer · · Score: 4, Informative

      The internet goes back to around 1970, but TCP/IP was invented in 1983. This gave us truely scalable routing and a seperate (therefore optional) transfer layer. The internet wouldn't be able to do all the useful things it does now if it still ran NCP.

    3. Re:#1 will be... by Monty_Lovering · · Score: 5, Funny

      Actually, this reminds me of a great bit from a UK comedy called 'Coupling', a bit like Friends except you never feel like killing the main characters, it is far ruder, and actually really funny. In it one character managed to build a convincing argument that every single major technological innovation was to enable men to see more breasts. Fire; you can see breasts at night. Art; enabled people to draw breasts. Clothing; you don't appreciate seeing breasts the same if they are out there all the time. Domesticated beats of burden; you can travel longer distances to see breasts. Agriculture; no mote multi-day hunting trips away from breasts. Water transport; now water is no barrier to seeing breasts. Writing; allowed communication about breasts. The wheel; as per beast of burden. Printing; allowed mass production of the art. Photography; allowed you to see real breasts even if they weren't there. The telephone; enabled calling women to arrange seeing their breasts. Film; moving breasts! .. and so forth. And the Internet is the crowning achievement, as it means a man (or woman if so inclined) can see more breasts in an afternoon than a person could realistically ever have seen in their lifetime.

  2. Boo on this list. by garcia · · Score: 4, Interesting

    For example, many people turn off their PCs (No. 3) and their HDTV (No. 19) or plasma screen TVs (No. 18) as they leave their homes.

    Excuse me? PCs are VERY important and probably deserving of #3 but to say that HDTV and Plasma are in the top 100 is pushing it.

    I have only seen HDTV at stores and on display at the state fair (I'm relatively unimpressed). I know one single person that has it and he uses it through DirecTV. I don't know a single person that owns a Plasma screen and I really don't think that they are terribly important.

    HDTV is a bunch of tax-funded bullshit that's going to bring down the right to record as you choose. Media conglomorates aren't going to want you to have digitized recordings of high-def format because then you can compete with their DRMd discs.

    Boo on this list.

  3. Well this is CNN by antifoidulus · · Score: 4, Funny

    so I am expecting CNN to be listed as the greatest innovation in the past 25 years.

  4. iPod by ponds · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's obviously the iPod, we can stop speculating now.

  5. RFID by amembleton · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I am suprised that RFID is at #10 on the list.

    From the article: In creating the list, the group hoped to single out "25 non-medically related technological innovations that have become widely used since 1980, are readily recognizable by most Americans, have had a direct and perceptible impact on our everyday lives, and/or could dramatically affect our lives in the future

    Is RFID really recognisable by most Americans?

  6. The George Foreman Grilling Machine by waynegoode · · Score: 4, Funny
    or the George Foreman Grilling Machine.

    Arrrgggghhhh! How could I have so foolishly said The World Wide Web? It's nothing compared to the tasty wholesome lean goodness of a George Foreman Grilling Machine grilled burger!

    1. Re:The George Foreman Grilling Machine by dassbaba · · Score: 4, Funny

      damn straight. What is this World Wide Web anyway? Can you make burgers with it?

      --
      !@
  7. Wow, I couldn't disagree more by maynard · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I have only seen HDTV at stores and on display at the state fair (I'm relatively unimpressed). I know one single person that has it and he uses it through DirecTV.

    I own two HDTVs, an Hitachi rear projection CRT set and a Sony HS-20 front project or for my living room. Combined with a decent DD 5.1 sound and a home theater really does compete with commercial movie theaters. In Boston every broadcast station is now digital; that's ABC, CBS, NBC, PBS, FOX, UPN, and WC. I actually get more HD content from broadcast than DirecTV (I have DirectTV too). HBO and Showtime in HD is pretty damn nice. Widescreen aspect ration is very damn nice! Uhhh... whether HDTV is the greatest consumer invention since sliced bread, I don't know. But... I like it! :)

    HDTV is a bunch of tax-funded bullshit that's going to bring down the right to record as you choose. Media conglomorates aren't going to want you to have digitized recordings of high-def format because then you can compete with their DRMd discs.

    Uhhh... just so we're clear: HDTV display technology and broadcast standards are different from the political policies being pursued by media conglomerates in their attempt to limit consumer freedom. Right? HDTV deployment does not mandate the consumer limitation by politcial fiat. --M

  8. #1 will be search engines by tomhudson · · Score: 4, Insightful
    #1 will be search engines - google, yahoo, etc.

    They make the web, newgroups, etc useful.

    "Google it" :-)

  9. Read the article by Dean+Edmonds · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They don't say that these innovations were created in the last 25 years, just that they "have become widely used since 1980".

    The net most certainly falls into that category.

    --

    -deane

  10. Obviously 1st place innovation by roman_mir · · Score: 4, Funny

    Suing everyone around you for money instead of working for it.

  11. No, it's not "nanotech" by Animats · · Score: 4, Informative
    "The device that causes an airbag to inflate in a crash is a nanotech device," said David Kirkpatrick, senior editor at Fortune Magazine.

    No, it's not. It's an accelerometer made in an IC fab. That's not atomic-level engineering. Not even close. By IC standards, it's huge.

    The "nanotechnology" label is getting out of hand. It used to apply to concepts for elaborate structures made atom by atom. Now that funding is available, it's used to refer to finely ground particles.

  12. The list sucks by Spazmania · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Some of their choices were obvious. Others were poor. Here are my complaints:

    10) RFID tags. Given that RFID is still mostly smoke and mirrors, is it reasonable to call it a major innovation of the past 25 years? Maybe 10 years from now we'll think so, but it doesn't belong on this year's list.

    11) MEMS. What? No! VLSI is vastly more important than MEMS, and it didn't even make the list. Besides, MEMS is little more than a pit stop on the road to nanotech.

    19) HDTV. HDTV is not a top innovation of any year, let alone a top innovation of the past 25. It was a committee-designed system haphazardly thrown together that has yet to make any meaningful impact on everyday life.

    21) Nanotech. Nanotech will be an amazing innovation if it ever gets here, but is it fair to call something that's still mostly science fiction a top innovation of the past 25 years?

    24) Modern hearing aids. Yes, they're better, but its evolutionary not revolutionary.

    25) Short Range, High Frequency Radio. Uh yeah. This is not an innovation. Its a category of innovations like digital radio, spread spectrum, 802.11 and cordless phones.

    And of course, #1 will be the World Wide Web. Since they've seperated email from the Internet, they'll seperate that as well.

    But, having split out the Internet into its components the panel has failed badly in missing TCP/IP v4 from 1981, clearly a critical innovation of the past 25 years. Vastly more important than HDTV.

    --
    Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
  13. Some errors IMO by Graemee · · Score: 4, Informative

    The shuttle, wasn't that designed and built in the 70's?

    The PC is a product of the late 70's too. The Apple II, Atari and Commodore PET all were released in 78-79.

    So # 3 & 20 are 70's

    Air bags date to the 60's but is the footdragging by and reluctance of goverments to make the car makers use them innovation? NO

    Strike number 13 too.

    So it down to 22.

  14. The Real #1 Innovation by Luscious868 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Fake breasts ....

    Think about it for a minute. Without fake breasts we would never have had Bay Watch. Without Bay Watch, David Hasselhoff would have been a has-been alcoholic actor rather than an alcoholic actor in the twilight of a mediocre career in television. What a crying shame that would have been.