The
telephone is an instrument that converts voice and sound signals into
electrical impulses for transmission by wire to a different location,
where another telephone receives the electrical impulses and turns them
back into recognizable sounds. In 1875, Alexander Graham Bell built the
first telephone that transmitted electrically the human voice.
2. The History of Computers
There
are many major milestones in the history of computers, starting with
1936, when Konrad Zuse built the first freely programmable computer.
3. Television
In
1884, Paul Nipkow sent images over wires using a rotating metal disk
technology with 18 lines of resolution. Television then evolved along
two paths, mechanical based on Nipkow's rotating disks, and electronic
based on the cathode ray tube. American Charles Jenkins and Scotsman
John Baird followed the mechanical model while Philo Farnsworth, working
independently in San Francisco, and Russian émigré Vladimir Zworkin,
working for Westinghouse and later RCA, advanced the electronic model.
4. The Automobile
In
1769, the very first self-propelled road vehicle was invented by French
mechanic, Nicolas Joseph Cugnot. However, it was a steam-powered model.
In 1885, Karl Benz designed and built the world's first practical
automobile to be powered by an internal-combustion engine. In 1885,
Gottlieb Daimler took the internal combustion engine a step further and
patented what is generally recognized as the prototype of the modern gas
engine and later built the world's first four-wheeled motor vehicle.
5. The Cotton Gin
Eli
Whitney patented the cotton gin on March 14, 1794. The cotton gin is a
machine that separates seeds, hulls and other unwanted materials from
cotton after it has been picked.
6. The Camera
In
1814, Joseph Nicéphore Niépce created the first photographic image with
a camera obscura, however, the image required eight hours of light
exposure and later faded. Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre is considered the
inventor of the first practical process of photography in 1837.
7. The Steam Engine
Thomas
Savery was an English military engineer and inventor who in 1698,
patented the first crude steam engine. Thomas Newcomen invented the
atmospheric steam engine in 1712. James Watt improved Newcomen's design
and invented what is considered the first modern steam engine in 1765.
8. The Sewing Machine
The
first functional sewing machine was invented by the French tailor,
Barthelemy Thimonnier, in 1830. In 1834, Walter Hunt built America's
first (somewhat) successful sewing machine. Elias Howe patented the
first lockstitch sewing machine in 1846. Isaac Singer invented the
up-and-down motion mechanism. In 1857, James Gibbs patented the first
chain-stitch single-thread sewing machine. Helen Augusta Blanchard
patented the first zig-zag stitch machine in 1873.
9. The Light Bulb
Contrary
to popular belief, Thomas Alva Edison didn't "invent" the light bulb,
but rather he improved upon a 50-year-old idea. In 1809, Humphry Davy,
an English chemist, invented the first electric light. In 1878, Sir
Joseph Wilson Swan, an English physicist, was the first person to invent
a practical and longer-lasting electic lightbulb (13.5 hours) with a
carbon fiber filament. In 1879, Thomas Alva Edison invented a carbon
filament that burned for forty hours.
10. Penicillin
Penicillin
was discovered by Alexander Fleming in 1928. Andrew Moyer patented the
first method of industrial production of penicillin in 1948.
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