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Are There Any Real Inventors Left?

An anonymous reader writes "The BBC is running a story about invention and innovation, suggesting that there have been no truly new inventions in a long time. 'Consumers are presented with an "invention illusion," which is really little more than a marketing tool to give the impression of "breakthrough" products. This is a difficult cycle to break, particularly with the media's appetite for sensational stories, and it is hampering opportunities for credible companies without sexy stories. It also means that many entrepreneurs are looking for innovation in the wrong places and pursuing new product design ineffectively.' It leads to the question: what are the most recent things you can think of that have been actual, new inventions? Or has the high-tech revolution just been iterative innovation?"

5 of 417 comments (clear)

  1. Sensational indeed by Maury+Markowitz · · Score: 5, Informative

    "particularly with the media's appetite for sensational stories"

    What, like claiming there are no new inventions to get the digerati all a-twitter and drive traffic to your site? Like that, you mean?

    I have asthma. Over the past 35 years I have witnessed the slow and steady destruction of this affliction. I started with drugs that were expensive and did little or nothing to actually steady my attacks. Today I use something called Singulair which I take once a day and essentially makes my asthma disappear. It also mutes down all of my allergies, I can pet cats without any side effects now.

    According to the BBC, this is not an invention. That's because we had drugs before, and we have other ones today. Clearly this is not *really* any sort of progress, right? The fact that my life, and millions of others, have been utterly transformed is just an illusion!

  2. You just need to know where to look by sl4shd0rk · · Score: 5, Informative

    People like this are the modern day inventors.

    [0] - http://makerfaire.com/
    [1] - http://makerspace.com/
    [2] - http://www.instructables.com/index

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  3. Fermat's Last Theorem by justthinkit · · Score: 4, Informative
    Fermat's Last Theorem, cracked by a guy working in his attic for 7 years.

    And yes, he did innovate, a la Newton, along the way.

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  4. Re:iterative innovation by RoboJ1M · · Score: 3, Informative

    Indeed, it's so very exciting to watch.

    I love Desertec's idea of concentrating solar plants in the deserts of north africa with HVDC lines supplying europe.
    Wouldn't it be wonderful to see money flood into Africa which doesn't involve digging shiny rocks out the ground.
    They have a fantastic statistic of how much desert solar would be required to run europe. It looks like a postage stamp on the map!

  5. This is a boring definition of "iterative". by jeffb+(2.718) · · Score: 3, Informative

    I'd say many of these these are largely market breakthroughs, the application of an existing technology to a new market. If anything, with the exception of the Internet, these demonstrate the article's point.

    7. Speech recognition. Computerized version of break audio into components, looking them up in a translation table, and report results.

    8. Automatic language translation. Computerized version of looking something up in a translation table and reporting results.

    Wow. Just wow. You really have no idea what actually goes into natural-language recognition and translation. For starters, we've been able to "break audio into components and look them up in a translation table" for, oh, fifty or sixty years now. Speech recognition was "ten years away" for the first thirty or forty of those years. Now, it's basically arrived, although there's still plenty to be done.

    What made it possible? Partly, it was these last four or five orders of magnitude of improvement in processor speed and memory size. But there's also a colossal amount of research in signal processing, statistical analysis, and AI that you're simply sweeping under the rug.

    By the same reasoning you applied to these points, the Internet is even less of a "breakthrough" -- it's a simple iterative advance stemming from more numerous and widely-used computers, better data-transmission technology, and new market demand. Except that it's anything but "simple", and the "iterations" that led to it took us over a precipice. On this side of the precipice, everything is different.

    When you come right down to it, every invention is an "iterative advance" based on pre-existing technology, simply because you can't really base an invention on technology that doesn't exist yet, and because you can't take infinite steps. So, your observation may be technically valid, but I don't think it's useful.