- Adolph's Meat Tenderizer (Adolph Rempp)
- airbag (Allen Breed)
- air brake (George Westinghouse)
- air conditioning (Willis Carrier)
- airplane (Orville & Wilbur Wright)
- air purifier (Frederick Cottrell)
- alternating current (Nicola Tesla)
- Apple computer (Steve Jobs)
- aqualung for divers (Jacques Cousteau)
- atom "smashers" (Ernest Lawrence and Vandergraff)
- ATM (Luther Simijian)
- audio sound generators (William Hewlett)
- Avery labels (Stan Avery)
- baby bottle with hole in the middle (Nickie and William Campbell)
- ball point pen (John Loud)
- Barbie doll (Ruth Handler)
- blender (Stephen Poplawski)
- Blue jeans (Levi Strauss)
- brown 'n serve dinner rolls (Joe Gregor)
- brown paper bag (Margaret Knight)
- calculator (William Seward Burroughs)
- can opener (William W. Lyman)
- car radio (Paul Galvin)
- carpet sweeper (Melville Bissell)
- Castro Convertible sofa beds (Bernard Castro)
- CB Walkie-Talkie (Al Gross)
- Celestial Seasonings herbal tea (Mo Siegel)
- celluloid (John Hyatt)
- cereal (George Kellogg)
- Clue board game (Anthony Pratt)
- Coca-Cola (Dr. John S. Pemberton)
- color film - Kodachrome (Leo Godowsky & Leopold Mannes)
- computer mouse (Douglas C. Engelbart)
- condensed milk (Gail Borden)
- cotton gin (Eli Wbitney)
- Cracker Jack (F.W. Rueckheim)
- Crayola crayons (Edwin Binney & Harold Smith)
- Delta faucet (Alex Manoogian)
- diesel engine (Rudolph Diesel)
- digital fax (Robert Wernikoff)
- dishwasher (Josephine Garis Cochraine)
- disposable diaper (Marion Donovan)
- disposable paper cup (Hugh Moore)
- DoveBar ice cream (Leo Stefanos)
- Dr. Scholl's foot care products (Dr. William Scholl)
- dynamite (Alfred Nobel)
- earmuffs (Chester Greenwood)
- electric blanket (S. I. Russell)
- electronic calculators (An Wang)
- electric shaver (Jacob Schick)
- elevator (Elisha Otis)
- engine-driven generator (Delco) - Charles Kettering
- frozen foods (Clarence Birdseye)
- Fig Newton (James Mitchell)
- FM radio (Edwin Armstrong)
- Frisbee (Fred Morrison)
- frozen pizza (Rose Totino)
- gas mask (Garrett Morgan)
- Gatling gun (Richard Gatling)
- golf tee (Dr. William Lowell)
- Gatorade (Robert Cade, M.D.)
- grocery cart (Sylvan Goldman)
- gyroscope (Charles Stark Draper)
- Hawaiian Tropic suntan oils (Ron Rice)
- helicopter (Igor Sikorsky)
- hot dog roller cooker (Calvin MacCracken)
- implantable cardiac pacemaker (Wilson Greatbatch)
- intermittent windshield wiper (Robert Kearns)
- Jacuzzi whirlpool (Candido and Roy Jacuzzi)
- Jantzen swimwear (John and Roy Zehntbauer)
- Jolt Cola (C.J. Rapp)
- Kitty Litter (Edward Lowe)
- Knox Gelatin (Rose Markward Knox)
- Koosh Ball (Scott Stillinger)
- laser (Gordon Gould)
- La-Z-Boy recliner (Edwin Shoemaker)
- Learjet (Bill Lear)
- Life Savers Candy (Clarence Crane)
- light bulb (Thomas Edison)
- Liquid Paper (Bette Nesmith Graham)
- Louisville Slugger baseball bat (Pete Browning)
- magnetic core memory (Kenneth Olsen, founder, Digital Corp.)
- manufacture of aluminum (Charles Hall)
- Maytag washers (Fred Maytag)
- M- 16 weapon (Eugene Stoner)
- microphone & gramophone (Emile Berliner)
- microwave cookware (Stanley Mason)
- Moen faucets (Al Moen)
- Monopoly board game (Charles Barrow)
- mood rings (Marvin Wernick)
- Morse code (Samuel Morse)
- ME (Raymond Damadian)
- Murphy bed (Willliam Murphy)
- Nerf ball (Reynolds Guyer)
- Nike shoe (Bill Bowerman)
- nuclear reactor (Enrico Fernii and Leo Szilard)
- oasis floral foam (Vemon Smithers)
- Odor-Eaters (Herbert Lapidus)
- outboard motor (Ole Evinrude)
- parking meter (Carlton Magee)
- PC-DOS and MS-DOS computer operating systems (Tim Patterson)
- peach (Luther Burbank)
- Pepperidge Farm bakery (Margaret Rudkin)
- Pepsi-Cola (Caleb Bradham)
- permanent wave machine (Marjorie Joyner)
- phonograph (Thomas Edison)
- plastic (Leo Baekeland)
- pneumatic tire (J.B. Dunlop)
- Polaroid camera (Edwin Land)
- Polarizing sunglasses (Edwin Land)
- Pong - I st video game (Nolan Bushnell)
- Popsicles (Frank Epperson)
- pop top can (Ermal Fraze)
- pop-up tissue box (Andrew Olsen)
- pop-up toaster (Charles Strite)
- potato chips (George Crum)
- PowerBars snack food (Brian Maxwell)
- power hand tools (Black & Decker)
- power steering (Francis Davis)
- punch card tabulating machine (Herman Hollerith)
- quartz timers (George Pierce and Walter Cady)
- radio (Guglielmo Marconi)
- radio tube (Dr. Lee deForest)
- ready mix paint (Henry Sherwin)
- respirator (Dr. Forrest Bird)
- revolver (Samuel Colt)
- rickshaw (Rev. Jonathan Scobie)
- rocketry (Robert Goddard)
- Rollerblades (Scott & Brennan Olsen)
- roll film for cameras (George Eastman)
- Rolodex (Alfred Neustadter)
- safety pin (Walter Hunt)
- safety razor (King Gillette)
- Samsonite luggage (Jesse Shwayder)
- Scrabble board game (Alfred Butts)
- ship propeller (John Ericsson)
- silo (Fred Hatch)
- Slinky toy (Richard James)
- snowboard (Tim Sims)
- Snugli baby carrier (Ann Moore)
- soda straw (Otto Diefenbach)
- sonogram. (Robert H. Rines)
- S.O.S. scouring pads (Edwin W. Cox)
- space guidance systems (Charles Draper)
- standardized cooking recipes (Fannie Farmer)
- strobe lights (Harold Edgerton)
- submarine (Cornelius van Drebbel)
- super computer (Seymour Cray)
- telephone (Alexander Graham Bell)
- television (Philo Farnsworth)
- traffic light (Garrett Morgan)
- Timex watches (Joakim Lehmkuhl)
- Tabasco Sauce (Edmund McIhenny)
- teddy bear (Morris Michtom, founder, Ideal Toy Co.)
- Toll House cookie recipe (Ruth Wakefield)
- Topsy Tail (Tomima Edmark)
- Tupperware (Earl Tupper)
- tuxedo (Pierre Lorillard)
- TV on-screen programming (Michael Levine)
- 2000 Flushes toilet bowl cleaner (Al Eisen)
- typewriter (Christopher Sholes)
- vacuum bottle (James Dewar)
- vacuum cleaner (Ives McGaffhey)
- Velcro (George de Mestral)
- Vicks VapoRub (Lunsford Richardson)
- vulcanized rubber (Charles Goodyear)
- Walkman (Jerome Lemelson)
- waterbed (Charlie Hall)
- water skis (Ralph Samuelson)
- water softener (Emmett Culligan)
- Whitman Sampler (Stephen Whitman)
- Wizzzer toy top (Paul Brown)
- World Wide Web (Tim Berners-Lee)
- xerography (photocopying - Xerox) (Chester Carlson)
- Zamboni ice resurfacer for ice skating rinks (Frank Zamboni)
- zipper (Whitcomb Judson)
Saturday, June 21, 2008
Famous Products created by Infamous Inventors : NOT Big Company
Labels:
fact,
information,
tirvia,
uncommon knowledge,
unusual information
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
3 comments:
Why do you call these "infamous inventors"?
Yeah... I'm not sure the people on the list would appreciate that...
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/infamous
All truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as being self-evident.
Post a Comment