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... blogged about Time Magazine’s 50 Best Inventions of 2008. Because this was an annual thing for Time Magazine, ... story, check out Time Magazine’s 50 Best Inventions of 2009. This article contains photos and more information regarding each invention. ... immediately.
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Related Articles at JaypeeOnline:50 Best Inventions of 2008What is Humanity’s worst Invention ...
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... can mention in your Thomas Edison essay that during his lifetime Edison got more than 1000 patents on his inventions. By the way, you should also explain that many other people (engineers, scientists) who worked with Edison made his ... . It is, actually, one of the main controversies about Edison’s inventions, and you can discuss it in your Thomas Edison essay.
Besides, read our ...
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... early 2007, making its way onto Time's 50 Best Inventions of 2009 list. Microsoft is pleased.
The third in what is sure to be a long list ... of time. The magazine's annual list of the 50 Best Inventions highlights Project Natal, along with less significant ... TIME Magazine chose Project Natal as one of their Inventions of the Year, and thrilled to see the excitement around controller-free ...
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... ranked high amongst Time's top 50 inventions, but when it comes to end-of-year lists, I get a kick out of what's ... out Time's great walk-through its 50 top inventions at:
Time's 5 Worst Inventions:
1. Draconian electronic "Smile Checks" for Japanese Railway workers who ... . It's real, and one of the award-winning inventions from this year's quirky Ig Nobel Awards. ...
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The nineteenth century spawned a wealth of peculiar inventions. This website deals (in great detail) with the poison harpoons and lances that were invented at the height ... in a
letter titled, "Sea-Serpent Harpoon" to the editor
of the Mechanic's Magazine, and Register of Inventions and
Improvements. He explained:
In these days of inventions
and of sea-serpents, I deem ...
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Tony on 3 November 09 in NCIS expounded on well-known inventions, including mood rings, pet rocks, and sporks, to which the response was that they were terrible inventions, to which in turn Tony responded that they made their inventors wealthy ('drillionaires"). ... that "Tony of NCIS" may have a better grasp of inventions and innovations than a variety of patent law professors.
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