ShareThis

Homee

Search This Blog

Short origin stories of some Great Inventions

Monday, March 10, 2014

great inventions

Before the first condom, Europeans used animal face parts, the catholics believed the tampon will damage the hyman and the inspiration for the band aid came from a housewife that injured herself in the kitchen, Here are some short stories of a few great inventions.


1. The airbag
in 1952, John Hetrick, a retired industrial engineer, avoided an accident with his Chrysler in the last minute.The rest of his trip passed while wondering how can he soften the effects of a car accident. One year later he registered a patent for an array of pillows built in a way that they will inflate in case of a sudden stop\slowing down. But as he experience – it was easier to register the patent than really build it. Only years later it was built properly and on the right speed of inflation without hurting the passengers. The critical advancement happened when Alan Breed invented a cheap sensor – a magnet that holds a metal ball that gets released under specific forces – makes an electric circuit and make the pillows inflate.
great inventions

2. ATM
The first money giving machine was installed in New York at 1939. It’s inventor, Luther George Simian, saw in his mind a machine out of a hole in the wall that will allow customers to withdraw money without the need to go inside a bank. at the beginning only prostitutes and gamblers used this service, so it disappeared completely after 6 months. The real breakthrough arrived at 1969 when Donald Wetzel developed an automatic money machine for a company called Docotel – the machine was installed in Chemical bank in New York. to make the thieves turn away the machine was covered with thick iron that his making took approximately 8 hours. 4 years later there were already 2,000 atms around the united states. The cost for building and installing one was $30,000. These days there are over 400,000 machines spread around the united states.
great inventions

3. The Band-Aid
Josephine Dickinson, a housewife from New Jersey was the inspiration for her husband Earl, that was looking for an efficiunt way to protect her from house accidents. He took a piece of gauze put it on the sticky side of surgery plaster and on everything he put some crinoline so it could be rolled without sticking to itself. Afterwards – every time his wife cut herself, she would just take a piece of the readymade band aid instead of using a thread to tie the gauze to herself. at that time Dickinson worked for Johnson & Johnson that were already selling hygiene products – he showed his invention to the executives that almost instantly recognized the importance of the invention.


great inventions

4. Mints
Ancient egyptians used to put boiled honey and cinnamon on their tongues, the romans chew dill and in the victorian era the men prefered to chew licorice that were marketed as “perfume for the breathe”. Mints were usually considered as a treatment and remedy than candy. The real mints were invented in 1912, when a candy maker from Ohio named Clarence Crane made a candy for the hot summer days. He made a hole in the center and called it a life saver – for it’s look. The success of these mints are thanks to Edward Noble, a wandering book seller that with his friend G. Roy allen purchased Crane’s business in 1913 and aggressively marketed the mint. During the prohibition in the united states – they managed to sell the mints to hide the alcohol smell out of people’s mouths.
great inventions

5. Bullets
The first hot weapon was a little cannon: the gunpowder and the bullets were kept separately, and an outer source was needed to light it up like a flammable string of rope. Over the next 200 years new mechanisms were developed to make the spark needed and the modern cannon was created.
great inventions

6. Digital Camera
Steve Sasson was the new guy in Kodak’s research lab, when his boss asked him to investigate a new censor called CCD (Charged Coupled Device). The year was 1974 and the whole conversation lasted no more than 20 seconds. “This project was the least important one at that time”, says Sasson. One year later – equipped with a prototype for “Filmless camera”, sized like a small toaster – Sasson took the photo of Joy who worked across the hallway. The technology was not invented by Sasson but he was the one that found a way to decode and permanently store the data from the CCD and use a program to convert this information into a recognizable photo that can be displayed on Sony’s trinitron television.
great inventions

7. The Key
During medieval times and the european renaissance, locks and keys were nothing but a form of art, but security wise there was not much use for them. it was possible to break into locks by using a skeleton key.
great inventions

No comments:

Post a Comment

 

Blogger news

Most Reading

Archives

Blogger templates