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Top 100 Gadgets of All Time

akintayo writes "Mobile PC released its list of the top 100 gadgets of all time. The number one gadget was the Apple Powerbook 100. And the list does include some older gadgets, most notably the Abacus at #60. The BBC also has an article on the list."

56 of 415 comments (clear)

  1. #79 is the best one by nizo · · Score: 5, Funny

    I prefer #79 (TASER X26, 2003) If you have one of these you can probably eventually get everything else on the list.

    1. Re:#79 is the best one by ackthpt · · Score: 3, Funny
      I prefer #79 (TASER X26, 2003) If you have one of these you can probably eventually get everything else on the list.

      Pfft! Build your 0wn! All you need is a small high current cell, a high voltage transformer, an cheep motor to switch between charge/discharge of the primary coil, some light guage twisted pair and some bait stickers. (Test it on people who irritate you first, to make sure you don't have it set to deadly.)

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    2. Re:#79 is the best one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      What's a cheep motor? Does it work with bird power?

    3. Re:#79 is the best one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      Usually when I have to go #2, I go #1 first.

  2. swingline stapler by oscast · · Score: 4, Funny

    personally, I would have opted for the red swingline stapler.

    1. Re:swingline stapler by temojen · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I'd have opted for the plough, or perhaps kiln. Although "The Gadget" certainly had a more recent major impact on civilization.

    2. Re:swingline stapler by chris_mahan · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Speaking of the red swingline stapler, yes, the one from the movie, it's 2 cubes over on one of my teammates' desk.

      Not all of my co-workers are cheep.

      As far as the list: The #1 and #2 are: Breech-loading repeat action rifle, and the bayonet. With these, you can make any damn list you like: List of countries we've invaded, list of tribes we've wiped out, list of kings we've deposed, list of languages English has displaced.

      Isn't technology grand?

      --

      "Piter, too, is dead."

    3. Re:swingline stapler by sgant · · Score: 4, Funny

      My top gadgets? Yeah yeah, it's a cliche now, but I still can't live without these:

      1. Duct Tape - nuff said
      2. WD-40
      3. A Sharpie, black
      4. slot-head and phillips head screwdriver

      Drop me on an island and I'll build an empire!

      --

      "Leo Fender was in a 'state of grace' when he designed the Stratocaster." -- Paul Reed Smith
  3. Abacus by Infonaut · · Score: 5, Insightful
    So the abacus, in use for centuries, comes in at #60 of all time, but the PowerBook 100, which was in production for a few short years is ranked #1?

    The PowerBook 100 was a great machine and all, but let's be serious.

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
    1. Re:Abacus by Carbonite · · Score: 3, Informative

      Keep in mind that this list was in Mobile PC magazine.

      --
      ich muß mehr Kuhglocke haben
    2. Re:Abacus by Infonaut · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Keep in mind that this list was in Mobile PC magazine.

      Quite true. But I'd consider an abacus to be a pretty damned effective mobile computing device. It's certainly a better mobile PC than, say, a taser.

      --
      Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
    3. Re:Abacus by Carbonite · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I completely agree. I was just pointing out the most likely reason for the obvious bias in this list. Three different laptops ranked above the telephone? Absurd.

      --
      ich muß mehr Kuhglocke haben
    4. Re:Abacus by brilinux · · Score: 4, Funny
      But I'd consider an abacus to be a pretty damned effective mobile computing device

      When I was a boy, our abaci took up an entire wall, and we had to move the stones with donkeys, ropes, and pullies. Mobile computing my ass!

    5. Re:Abacus by cyngus · · Score: 4, Informative

      All ratings of this type tend to be biased towards the present. I think this is because how good a thing is roughly equates to someone considering how their life was prior to invention of product and how their life was after invention. In the case of the abacus, we can only speculate at the effect the device had on the lives of people when it was invented. With things that are more recent, we do not need to speculate, we know. Additionally newer things tend to have more funcitonality than previous items, and therefore are more useful in an absolute sense (I can only do math with my abacus, but with my PowerBook 100, I can play solitaire).

    6. Re:Abacus by Have+Blue · · Score: 5, Funny

      I agree that my abacus has a very intuitive interface and gets awesome battery life, but it seems to be taking a long time to compile a kernel. Anyone have tips for optimizing this?

  4. Top Gadgets? by ackthpt · · Score: 5, Funny
    I thought this looked an awful lot like a geeks Christmas list...

    d33r 54nt4, 1 b33n v3ry 1337 th15 y34r..

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    1. Re:Top Gadgets? by EnronHaliburton2004 · · Score: 5, Funny

      d33r 54nt4, 1 b33n v3ry 1337 th15 y34r..

      Dear Kid,

      There will be no presents for you until you learn how to use a fucking keyboard, you dimwit.

      -- Santa Claus

  5. here's the list by Jane_the_Great · · Score: 3, Informative

    100. nsi bedazzler, 1970s filler characters
    99. swingline 747 stapler, 2002 filler characters
    98. pez dispenser, 1927 filler characters
    97. mattel intellivision, 1980 filler characters
    96. olympus zuiko pearlcorder, 1970 filler characters
    95. carl zeiss victory 8 x 42 t*fl binoculars, 2004 filler characters
    94. schick electric razor, 1931 filler characters
    93. columbia graphophone dictaphone, 1907 filler characters
    92. popeil pocket fisherman, 1950s filler characters
    91. polar wireless heart rate monitor, 1977 filler characters
    90. maelzel metronome, 1816 filler characters
    89. rubik's cube, 1974 filler characters
    88. black & decker dustbuster, 1979 filler characters
    87. radio shack trs-80 model 100, 1983 filler characters
    86. tamagotchi, 1996 filler characters
    85. hohner harmonica, 1857 filler characters
    84. ronco inside-the-shell egg scrambler, 1978 filler characters
    83. accusplit memory stopwatch, 1972 filler characters
    82. alliance genie garage door opener, 1954 filler characters
    81. zippo windproof lighter, 1932 filler characters
    80. fisher space pen, 1967 filler characters
    79. taser x26, 2003 filler characters
    78. korg wt-10 electronic tuner, 1975 filler characters
    77. hasbro lite-brite, 1967 filler characters
    76. hp omnibook 300, 1993 filler characters
    75. laser pointer, 1980s filler characters
    74. lux minute timer, 1936 filler characters
    73. traxxas t-maxx rc car, 1999 filler characters
    72. master lock padlock, 1924 filler characters
    71. tyco toys tickle me elmo, 1996 filler characters
    70. atari pong c-100, 1976 filler characters
    69. cuisinart food processor, 1973 filler characters
    68. nokia 5100 series cell phone, 1998 filler characters
    67. leatherman pst, 1983 filler characters
    66. iridium satellite phone, 1998 filler characters
    65. mattel football ii, 1978 filler characters
    64. u.s. army p-38 can opener, 1942 filler characters
    63. maglite flashlight, 1979 filler characters
    62. sony wm-f5 sports walkman, 1983 filler characters
    61. motorola bravo numeric pager, 1986 filler characters
    60. abacus, 190 a.d. filler characters
    59. sextant, 1731 filler characters
    58. panasonic toughbook 18, 2003 filler characters
    57. mattel magic 8-ball, 1946 filler characters
    56. polaroid polavision land video camera, 1978 filler characters
    55. super scissors, 1990s filler characters
    54. the car alarm key fob, 1990s filler characters
    53. powell & lealand compound microscope, 1861 filler characters
    52. sony cfs-5000 boom box, 1980s filler characters
    51. irobot roomba, 2002 filler characters
    50. etch-a-sketch, 1960 filler characters
    49. casio cassiopeia e-10, 1996 filler characters
    48. sony digital mavica mvc-hd5, 1997 filler characters
    47. canadian signal corps c-58 walkie talkie, 1943 filler characters
    46. texas instruments speak & spell, 1978 filler characters
    45. silva compass, 1933 filler characters
    44. fuzzbuster, 1968 filler characters
    43. handspring visor, 1999 filler characters
    42. h4 marine chronometer, 1761 filler characters
    41. rim interactive pager, 1996 filler characters
    40. falcon dust-off, early 1970s filler characters
    39. apple newton messagepad 120, 1994 filler characters
    38. sandisk compactflash card, 1994 filler characters
    37. jvc gr-c1 camcorder, 1984 filler characters
    36. pulsar quartz digital watch, 1972 filler characters
    35. screwpull corkscrew, 1979 filler characters
    34. garmin gpscom 170, 1997 filler characters
    33. bose quietcomfort headphones, 2000 filler characters
    32. radiolan backbonelink and pc cardlink, 1997 filler characters
    31. trek thumbdrive, 1999 filler characters
    30. jvc hr-3300 vhs vcr, 1976 filler cha

    --
    THIS ACCOUNT IS OFFICIALLY RETIRED/RETARDED.
  6. Jeez, Slashdotted already... by aendeuryu · · Score: 5, Funny

    They might as well be running their webserver on #50...

    This might get modded funny if people could actually get to the site and figure out which one #50 is.

  7. Well! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
    The BBC also has an article on the list.

    Congratulations to the BBC for making the gadets list!

  8. Recent biases by IANAL(BIAILS) · · Score: 4, Interesting
    After flipping through the list, it seems like the vast majority of the products are from recent years (or at least the past few decades). While I can understand this - they are the gadgets that are now part of our everyday life and of course they are extremely useful... but where are the technologies/inventions from the past that helped us develop all the fancy electronic gadgets that we have today?

    I would have thought the abacus (ranked on the list, but lost in the middle) would have been more important in the overall list than a Tivo... the transistor or vacuum tube before computers and digital cameras...

    1. Re:Recent biases by Carbonite · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It would also seem sensible to rank the telephone above the ipod.

      --
      ich muß mehr Kuhglocke haben
    2. Re:Recent biases by Otter · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And the sextant and chronometer arguably affected long-distance travel more than Bose noise-canceling headphones...

    3. Re:Recent biases by dr_dank · · Score: 3, Funny

      And the sextant and chronometer arguably affected long-distance travel more than Bose noise-canceling headphones...

      Hell no. Ships back then were very loud. The noise cancelling headphones allowed the likes of Magellan and Cortez to listen to their Ye Olde 50 Pence albums in peace.

      --
      Where does the school board find them and why do they keep sending them to ME?
  9. Absolute ZERO to see here. Move along now by essreenim · · Score: 3, Insightful
    86. TAMAGOTCHI, 1996 Could the overwhelming success of this pocket-size virtual pet -- 40 million were sold worldwide -- make this the strangest cultural phenomenon ever? I mean WTF? It's was nothing new then it it's nothing new now.

    An also, they feature a satellite wireless mobile phone developed by a company that flopped through the ground. Well done! Worst list EVER. These lists should be seious. It looks like a list Barbie would have made.

  10. Cosmonaut use of pencil myth yet again by lowlypeon · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Fun article, but could have been researched a little better. In its bit on the Fisher Space Pen, it repeats the myth that while we blew millions developing a pen that could write upside down, the Soviets just used pencils, which is a common myth. As one cosmonaut said, "pencil lead breaks...and is not good in space capsule; very dangerous to have metal lead particles in zero gravity"

    1. Re:Cosmonaut use of pencil myth yet again by the+pickle · · Score: 4, Funny

      If the Soviet cosmonauts thought pencil lead actually contained "metal lead particles," it's no wonder they lost the Cold War...

      p

    2. Re:Cosmonaut use of pencil myth yet again by Mattintosh · · Score: 3, Funny

      'Tang is even less well known on /.

      Sorry, I had to...

    3. Re:Cosmonaut use of pencil myth yet again by SharpFang · · Score: 3, Informative

      Sorry to say, but Snopes.com is extremely biased pro-american conservative site. (just compare the proportion of pro-Bush "Trues" and anti-Bush "falses")

      1) Pencil leads made of actual lead don't snap. Their writing properties are worse than those made of graphite (still readable enough though), but they are practically unbreakable. So no risk of snapping off, no lead particles, no burning either. A metal-cased graphite pencil is perfectly fire-proof and pretty much break-proof. True both graphite and lead are conductors, but so are almost all items made of metal, and there were quite a few of them. Only snap-off pieces could eventually get into the electronics, but lead doesn't snap so no problem.
      2) There was enough of easily flammable materials in the cabin so they would catch fire by themselves in atmosphere of pure oxygen. Not that it would matter, the astronaut wouldn't live long in pure oxygen either.

      And before you start about how poisonous lead is, people were using lead-based pencils for hundreds of years before they were replaced by graphite ones.

      --
      45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
  11. could only read 9 by frovingslosh · · Score: 4, Funny

    Any list that includes the POPEIL POCKET FISHERMAN in a list of greates gadgets isn't worth reading any further.

    --
    I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
    1. Re:could only read 9 by gstoddart · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Any list that includes the POPEIL POCKET FISHERMAN in a list of greates gadgets isn't worth reading any further.


      Ahh, but if you'd read further you'd have seen such gems as:
      • 84. RONCO INSIDE-THE-SHELL EGG SCRAMBLER, 1978
      • 77. HASBRO LITE-BRITE, 1967
      • 71. TYCO TOYS TICKLE ME ELMO, 1996


      And other silly things.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
  12. bad list by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    what, no sex toys? the hitachi magic wand at least deserves a nod.

  13. What - no Rabbit? by The+Steely+Dan · · Score: 5, Funny

    My SO swears by hers!

    1. Re:What - no Rabbit? by RichDice · · Score: 3, Funny
      Everyone else just swears at it. Hang up and drive!

      You have no idea what the original poster is talking about, do you?

      Original poster -- sounds like you've got some work to do on the home front!

      Cheers,
      Richard

  14. Definition of Gadget? by dostert · · Score: 3, Insightful

    A gadget is "a device that is very useful for a particular job" (http://www.wordreference.com/definition/gadget) Things by Ronco, space pen, laser pointer, etc are gadgets. A general laptop is NOT a gadget. Unless you define your job as 'using a computer' which as we all know if much more than just a single thing. Similarly, abacus and calculator are used for mathematics, engineering, etc, which again I think the 'field of mathematics' is much more than a single particular thing. If you want to make a list of the most useful inventions, many of these will go on there, but at least in my mind, a Powerbook is not a gadget.

  15. Forgot the P-P-P-Powerbook! by Evil+W1zard · · Score: 4, Funny

    Now that is a gadget that deserves some recognition in the top 100! http://www.p-p-p-powerbook.com/

    --
    News Reporters Make Tasty Polar Bear Treats!
  16. How about.. by J+x · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ..the printing press? I'm pretty sure most of this list couldn't exist without the proliferation of knowledge this allowed.

  17. No Commodore Products? by vjmurphy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Seems like the Vic-20 or Commodore 64 would be in there somewhere. Certainly they were much better gadgets than something like a Panasonic Toughbook or two flavors of Apple laptops.

    --
    Vincent J. Murphy
    Spandex Justice
  18. Centuries? Try millenia! by jd · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The abacus is unquestionably the oldest calculating machine still in use today, and it is positively ancient. It also has no buffer overflow problems, doesn't require software patches, and isn't subject to patents.


    However, it is not the only gadget that is misplaced or missing. There is no mention of the Babbage Difference Engine. Where are all of Sinclair's devices and gizmos? Where's all the award winners of the Prince of Wales Awards for Innovation?


    Where's 99.9% of the stuff invented between 10,000 BC and 1970 AD?

    --
    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)
    1. Re:Centuries? Try millenia! by shotfeel · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The abacus is unquestionably the oldest calculating machine still in use today

      I'd say the oldest calculating machine, and most used even today, can be found at the end of your arm.

    2. Re:Centuries? Try millenia! by Nefarious+Wheel · · Score: 4, Funny
      I'd say the oldest calculating machine, and most used even today, can be found at the end of your arm.

      And the oldest digital calculator too.

      --
      Do not mock my vision of impractical footwear
  19. how about a list of pre-1700 gadgets? by davidwr · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'd love to see a "top 100 gadgets of the pre-industrial age" - say, anything before 1700 just to be arbitrary.

    Special notation to any gadget that was still in common use in the 20th century.

    The abacus of course, and the pen and the first hand-carryable printing press come to mind.

    The lantern and numerous gadgets used on the farm and by doctors and scientists would also make the list.

    If you have a favorite pre-1700 gadget, please reply here.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    1. Re:how about a list of pre-1700 gadgets? by temojen · · Score: 3, Informative

      Plough
      Threshing machine
      Clay pot
      grist mill
      irrigation wheel
      waterwheel
      hammermill
      rotary forge blower
      Compass (for measuring distances on a map)
      Compass (direction finding)
      Theodelite
      Semaphore
      Telescope
      Pot-in -Pot
      water pump
      sanitary latrine
      sewers
      Aquaduct

      (not all in use in "developed" countries)

  20. What about... by eno2001 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...the wheel? Most of the gadgets in the world could't live without one.

    --
    -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
  21. What a biased load of crap by prgrmr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The sextant and the abacus did more to shape the whole of humanity than the rest of the list combined. The abacus is still in use today, and probably by more people than there were Powerbooks made, let alone sold and still in use.

    The top ten items on the list are almost all entertainment based or related rather than scientific acheivements or technical enablers. They ought to have split this into two lists: one for "fun" stuff and one for science and industry.

  22. Re:powerbook 100? by sulli · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I would have chosen the 140/170 instead of the 100. The 100 was a one-time design that was never used again, made by Sony. The 140/145/150/160/165/170/180 was a design that redefined portable computing and was available for years.

    --

    sulli
    RTFJ.
  23. Dildo? by Himring · · Score: 3, Funny

    Gadgets needed moving parts and/or electronics to warrant inclusion.

    And no dildo? You call this news for nerds?...

    --
    "All great things are simple & expressed in a single word: freedom, justice, honor, duty, mercy, hope." --Churchill
  24. Re:When I was a boy... by TimeTraveler1884 · · Score: 4, Funny

    When I was a boy, the Greeks attacked and killed the Latins only to steal thier words.

  25. Some gadgets they missed.. by wfberg · · Score: 4, Interesting

    In no particular order..

    Perhaps it doesn't appeal to the stereotypical geek, but the vibrator. The pocket calculator as well as; The calculator/remote control/radio controlled/FM radio *wristwratch* (surely the pinnacle of minitiaturization!).

    Of course, the bonefone: link. The transistor radio. The world receiver radio. The wind-up/clockwork radio/charger. The intimidating maglite flashlight. Glowsticks! Neither electonic, nor moving parts, but who can resist luminecence!

    7" 33 1/3rpm vinyl gramophone records; or I can do you even better than that - 7" 33 1/3 rpm plastic gramophone records that were given away as inlays with MSX Magazine, that you'd dub on tape, and you'd "load" programs off of the tape using the regular "data cassette recorder".

    CB (Citizen's Band, 27 "megacycle") radio. ZX80. C64. Nuff said. The lava lamp! Duh! The strap-on (wait for it) keyboard (keyboard guitar).

    The hearing aid. The answering machine remote control/handheld DTMF tone dialer. Also; the blue box! The minox sub-miniature "spy" camera (as seen in james bond). The SLR Single Lens Reflex camera. Automatic tweezers (They don't work particularly well, but they have a gadget-esque movement)

    The portable DVD player. Toys robots (remote controlled, especially; the robosapiens is a good stab at the concept). Magnesium firestarters. (I'm the firestarter!)

    Personal Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacons (P-EPIRBs) RC cars, helicopters. E.g. The translator pen (scans text when you move across it, translates) The penman robotic plotter and of course the closely related concept of the Logo turtle..

    The random movement printer (If and when it becomes widely available..) Lego mindstorms (programmable bricks..)

    The most important hand-helds historically; the Smith&Wesson and the AK47.

    Also, though not an autonomous device, nor mechanical, nominated for achievements in disrupting the global economy, I'd like to recognize bubblejet printer ink, for costing more than its weight in gold or oil.

    Aerosol spray canisters; specifically,
    every graffitti artist's friend: spraypaint and every gadget-minded geek's friend: deodorant (especially the miniature cans) and of course; aerosol cheese! Also, perhaps slightly more
    palatable, mace pepper spray.

    The electric toothbrush (with induction-loop-charging-circuit magic!)
    Not the greatest gadget in history until you consider it's "dual use" nature, and the fact it's marketed so widely.

    Sattellite TV. Not the most portable of gadgets, but come on! Windscreenwiper glasses. (Though more of a chindogu) The mac. The iMac for doing it twice. The aibo.

    The "orgasmotron" (actually just a head massager, not at all naughty) Stylish pin clock. The keyghost hardware keystroke logger.

    The digital camera. The digital photo frame.
    The credit-card sized Anything, but in particular, the cre

    --
    SCO employee? Check out the bounty
  26. Re:If the list was compiled by a woman by denthijs · · Score: 4, Interesting
    #1 - The Dildo

    While true technically a Dildo does not belong to the realm of 'Gadgets'. The site defines a gadget as:

    It has to have electronic and/or moving parts of some kind.
    Scissors count, but the knife does not.

    It has to be a self-contained apparatus that can be used on its own, not a subset of another device.
    The flashlight counts; the light bulb does not. The notebook counts, but the hard drive doesn't.

    It has to be smaller than the proverbial bread box. This is the most flexible of the categories, since gadgets have gotten inexorably smaller over time. But in general we included only items that were potentially mobile:
    The Dustbuster counts; the vacuum cleaner doesn't.

    Now had you said Vibrator instead of Dildo you would've made a valid point!

    ohyeah, rtfa!;-)

  27. Re:Portable massagers by morzel · · Score: 4, Funny
    I can think of at least one "portable device" that many women would think is THE best invention ever...
    The credit card?
    --
    Okay... I'll do the stupid things first, then you shy people follow.
    [Zappa]
  28. always with the space pen myth by MustardMan · · Score: 3, Informative

    God damn do I hate the stupid space pen myth. Fischer developed the pen at his own expense, as graphite pencils had the potential to cause problems in the cabin. Remember, kids, graphite conducts electricity, and a tiny little pencil tip floating around the cabin could be a very bad thing. It takes all of ten seconds googling to debunk this stupid urban legend, but I constantly see it brought up over and over again.

  29. Plenty O Gadgets missing by technopinion · · Score: 3, Funny

    Where's my grandmother's clamp-on-the-counter hand-cranked apple peeler? That thing could peel an apple in 5 seconds flat. Certainly more innovative than half the stuff on that list.

  30. Magic 8-Ball?! by wcrowe · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Magic 8-Ball? Tickle-Me-Elmo? WTF?! How about the ratchet wrench? The cordless drill? The Simpson P260 Multimeter?

    Hey, next time your wife, girlfriend, or kid asks you to fix something, try waving your magic 8-ball at it, Sparky.

    (Sheesh!)

    --
    Proverbs 21:19
  31. we want feedback -- no really by Shooter6947 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    at the end of the article:

    WHAT'D WE FORGET!? Our brains are only so big ... we're sure we forgot a handful of excellent gadgets. So tell us, what'd we leave off the list? We'll publish the most popular reader submissions in an upcoming issue, and we'll send the official Mobile PC Pez dispenser to the person who suggests forgotten gadget #1, along with a copy of this issue autographed by the entire staff! Send submissions (along with your full name and address) to null@mobilepcmag.com. Remember: Nominations have to meet the criteria outlined on this page!


    I'll bet! 'null' at pcmag.com? I think we all know where the 'suggestion box' chute goes to: the shredder!