The 50 Greatest Gadgets of the Past 50 Years


We're living in the golden age of the gadget. Don't believe it? Check your pockets. Odds are you're carrying a portable music player, an electronic organizer, a keychain-size storage device, a digital camera, or a cell phone that combines some or all of these functions. And you'd probably be hard-pressed to live without them.

At PC World, we'd be lost without these things. We don't merely test and write about digital gear, we live and breathe the stuff. In honor of this raging gizmo infatuation, we polled our editors and asked them to name the top 50 gadgets of the last 50 years. The rules? The devices had to be relatively small (no cars or big-screen TVs, for example), and we considered only those items whose digital descendants are covered in PC World (cameras, yes; blenders, no). We rated each gadget on its usefulness, design, degree of innovation, and influence on subsequent gadgets, as well as the ineffable quality we called the "cool factor." Then we tallied the results.

After a lot of Web surfing, spreadsheet wrangling, and some near fistfights, we emerged with the following list. Some items in our Top 50 are innovative devices that appeared briefly and then were quickly consigned to museums and future appearances on eBay, but whose influence spread widely. Others are products we use every day--or wish we could.

So join us as we visit with the ghosts of gadgets past and present.

1. Sony Walkman TPS-L2 (1979)

Portable music players are so cheap and ubiquitous today that it's hard to remember when they were luxury items, widely coveted and often stolen. But when the blue and silver Walkman debuted in 1979, no one had ever seen anything quite like it. The $200 player virtually invented the concept of "personal electronics."

The first Walkman (also branded as the Stowaway, the Soundabout, and the Freestyle before the current name stuck) featured a cassette player and the world's first lightweight headphones. Apparently fearful that consumers would consider the Walkman too antisocial, Sony built the first units with two headphone jacks so you could share music with a friend. The company later dropped this feature. Now, more than 25 years and some 330 million units later, nobody wonders why you're walking down the street with headphones on. Learn more in Sony's history of the Walkman.

[Via - PCWorld] Make Money Online

Financial Gadgets

For the past few days, Mind Readers have become the most talked about object among gizmo-geeks.
It is more of a mechanical version of 20 questions game where the gadget takes up the role of the guesser, thus eliminating the role of its human counterpart.
It has close resemblance to human brain and has numerous neurons connected via synaptic connections. Interestingly, the gadget is now available online and needless to mention, are currently favorites of internet users.
Online gadgets, in other words widgets, currently rule the online world. With their unique feature of installing them in bogs and personal websites, they serve a lot of purpose of visitors.

Researches show, that a good number of internet populations have developed the habit of using debt calculators to handle their finances. Whether it is footing credit card bill or paying off home loan, debt calculators are easy to use devices that can really help you avoid thousands of complex calculations. Their unique feature helps you calculate figures like (Annual Percentage Rate) APR, Debt-Income ratio, interest amount within a fraction of second.

These are only a few names from the vast ocean of online gadgets. Their usage and purpose differ widely and should be applied keeping in mind individual requirements and preferences.

Mobile Phones with Free Gifts