Section C
Great Ideas
Some of the most important inventions of the past 2,000 years may surprise you.
Want to get rich? Become famous? You don't have to be a film star or a basketball player or a musician. You can do it by becoming an inventor. Over the past 2,000 years inventors have created machines and articles that have changed the world.
And it's not just the big ideas like computers, printing presses and steam engines (蒸汽機(jī)) that become big things.
Just think how the past 2,000 years would be different without these "small" big ideas:
It's a clean sweep
In 1871, American inventor Ives McGaffey realized that if you turned an air pump (氣泵)the opposite way, you would have a machine that could pick up dirt. He called his machine an aspirator(吸氣器). The huge device was powered by a steam engine.
Another American, James Murray Spangler, designed a much lighter machine in 1907 with an electric engine. He sold the idea, now called a vacuum cleaner(真空吸塵器),to a man named William H. Hoover. The company is still making Hoover vacuums and we're a little bit cleaner for it.
Stuck on you
Inventors get interested when they find out people don't like the way something works.
One day in 1923, young lab worker Richard Drew from the Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing(制造)Company heard workers in an automobile body shop complaining. It seems they could not find the right kind of tape to put on cars while they painted them. Either the tape stuck too much and ruined the paint job or it fell off too soon and the paint ran onto another part of the car.
Drew spent two years creating a tape that stuck just enough. We know it now as masking tape. But Drew wasn't done. In 1930, he created a see-through, water-proof(防水的), cellophane(薄膜)adhesive(膠粘劑). The company called it Scotch tape and started selling it by the ton.
Accidents can work wonders
In the late 1940s, engineer Percy L. Spencer of the Raytheon Company was experimenting with high-frequency(高頻率)radio waves. These had been used to find enemy planes and ships in World War II. Spencer noticed the waves had made a chocolate bar(塊)in his pocket soft. Could these waves be used to heat food?
Spencer soon invented the microwave oven(微波爐), which made millions of dollars for Raytheon and millions of bags of popcorn(爆米花)for kids everywhere.
Geniuses need not apply(應(yīng)用,努力)
Alexander Graham Bell was a teacher of the deaf. He did not know much about electricity. That was probably a good thing because most electricity masters did not think a voice could be sent over a wire. In three years of day and night effort, Bell figured out how to send sound over a changing electric current. He got his patent(專利)on the telephone on March 7, 1876. It is one of the most valuable patents ever given by the U.S.
Keep your trousers on
In 1907, engineer Gideon Sundback got interested in improving a "hookless(無(wú)鉤的)fastener(扣件)" patented in 1893. It was supposed to do away with the tiring work of buttoning the many buttons on clothes of the day. But the fastener did not work well.
For years Sundback lay awake half the night trying to solve the problem. In 1913 he designed a hookless fastener that worked. But no one made much money on the invention until a Canadian businessman decided to call it a "zipper(拉鏈)". Soon millions were sold every year and trousers everywhere stopped falling down.
Now that's a tiny — yet BIG — idea.
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奇思妙想
在過(guò)去兩千年里最重要的發(fā)明中,有一些會(huì)令你大吃一驚。
想富起來(lái)嗎?想出名嗎?你并不一定要成為影星、籃球運(yùn)動(dòng)員或音樂(lè)家。你可以通過(guò)當(dāng)發(fā)明家來(lái)實(shí)現(xiàn)自己的夢(mèng)想。 在過(guò)去兩千年里,發(fā)明家們創(chuàng)造了各式各樣改變了世界的機(jī)器和裝置。
不僅僅是諸如計(jì)算機(jī)、印刷機(jī)和蒸汽機(jī)之類的偉大想法變成了偉大的發(fā)明。
想想吧,要是沒(méi)有下面這些不起眼的、卻又是了不起的想法,過(guò)去的兩千年會(huì)是多么的不同:
吸塵器 挺管用
1871年,美國(guó)發(fā)明家艾夫斯·麥加菲意識(shí)到,如果將氣泵的轉(zhuǎn)動(dòng)反個(gè)向,它就會(huì)變成一臺(tái)能吸起灰塵的機(jī)器。 他稱之為吸氣器。這個(gè)巨大的裝置是由蒸汽機(jī)帶動(dòng)的。
另一位美國(guó)人詹姆斯·默里·斯潘格勒于1907年設(shè)計(jì)了一臺(tái)帶電動(dòng)機(jī)的更為輕便的機(jī)器。 他把這項(xiàng)現(xiàn)在叫做真空吸塵器的發(fā)明賣給了一個(gè)叫威廉·H·胡佛的男子。他的公司至今仍在制造胡佛牌真空吸塵器,我們的環(huán)境也因此而變得干凈些了。
好膠帶 招人愛(ài)
當(dāng)發(fā)明家們發(fā)現(xiàn)人們對(duì)某種東西不滿意時(shí),他們就會(huì)興趣大發(fā)。
1923年的一天,明尼蘇達(dá)州采礦與制造公司年輕的實(shí)驗(yàn)室技術(shù)員理查德·德魯聽(tīng)說(shuō)一家汽車車身制造廠的工人們遇到了個(gè)難題。 好像是他們找不到一種在給汽車噴漆時(shí)可以貼在車上的合適的膠帶。要么是膠帶太粘,結(jié)果把剛噴好的漆也弄壞了;要么是膠帶脫落得太快,結(jié)果油漆流到了汽車的其他部位。
德魯花了兩年的時(shí)間發(fā)明了一種粘度恰到好處的膠帶,就是我們今天的防護(hù)膠帶。 但是,德魯并沒(méi)有就此滿足。1930零年,他發(fā)明了一種透明、防水的薄膜膠粘劑。 他所在的公司把它叫做蘇格蘭膠帶,并開(kāi)始成噸地銷售。
偶然事 創(chuàng)奇跡
20世紀(jì)40年代后期,雷神公司的工程師珀西·L·斯潘塞正在從事高頻無(wú)線電波實(shí)驗(yàn)。 這些無(wú)線電波曾在第二次世界大戰(zhàn)中被用于搜索敵人的飛機(jī)和船只。 斯潘塞發(fā)現(xiàn),這類電波將他口袋里的一塊巧克力軟化了。那末,這些無(wú)線電波可不可以用來(lái)加熱食物呢?
不久,斯潘塞便發(fā)明了微波爐。這項(xiàng)發(fā)明為雷神公司賺到了數(shù)百萬(wàn)美元,也為世界各地的孩子們爆出了數(shù)百萬(wàn)袋的爆米花。
是天才 事必成
亞歷山大·格雷厄姆·貝爾曾經(jīng)當(dāng)過(guò)耳聾學(xué)生的教師。他對(duì)電學(xué)所知甚少。 這或許是件好事,因?yàn)榇蠖鄶?shù)電氣專家認(rèn)為聲音無(wú)法通過(guò)電線傳送。 經(jīng)過(guò)三年夜以繼日的努力,貝爾弄清了如何通過(guò)波動(dòng)的電流傳送聲音。 他于1876年3月7日獲得到了發(fā)明電話的專利。這是美國(guó)所批準(zhǔn)的最有價(jià)值的專利之一。
拉鏈到 褲不掉
1907年,工程師吉迪恩·森德貝克對(duì)改進(jìn)一件1893年的專利產(chǎn)品"無(wú)鉤扣件"產(chǎn)生了興趣。 人們認(rèn)為這種扣件能夠免除扣扣子的麻煩,因?yàn)楫?dāng)時(shí)的人們衣服上扣子很多,可當(dāng)時(shí)的無(wú)鉤扣件的性能并不理想。
一連幾年,森德貝克夜不能寐,試圖解決這一問(wèn)題。1913年,他設(shè)計(jì)了一種性能理想的無(wú)鉤扣件。 但并沒(méi)有人因此而發(fā)財(cái)。最后,一個(gè)加拿大商人決定給它起命為"拉鏈"。 很快,拉鏈的年銷售量達(dá)到了數(shù)百萬(wàn)條,人們也不再掉褲子了。
現(xiàn)在,拉鏈成了雖不起眼、卻很了不起的東西!