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inventions around the world - Coggle Diagram
inventions around the world
robots
The first digitally operated and programmable robot was invented by George Devol in 1954 and was ultimately called the Unimate. This later laid the foundations of the modern robotics industry.
Sense Perception.
Dexterity.
Intelligence. Human intelligence is derived from the elaborate and interconnected network of neurons within the human brain.
phone
Antonio Meucci is credited with inventing the first basic phone in 1849, and Frenchman Charles Bourseul devised a phone in 1854, Alexander Graham Bell won the first U.S. patent for the device in 1876
a standard numeric keypad
and serve two main functions: voice calls and message sending
the device is composed of a small screen
computer
The first computer was invented by Charles Babbage (1822) but was not built until 1991 Alan Turing invented computer science. The ENIAC (1945) was the first electronic general-purpose digital computer it filled a room. The Micral N was the world's first personal computer(1973).
accuracy, storage capacity,
versatility, automation
Speed
internet
Arpanet adopted TCP/IP on January 1, 1983, and from there researchers began to assemble the network of networks that became the modern Internet. The online world then took on a more recognizable form in 1990, when computer scientist Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web.
It is public by nature.
It doesn't belong to any entity, and it's universal and decentralized, so there are no control points at the hierarchical level
It offers information 24 hours a day, and it can be accessed as long as there is a connection.
the airplane
Wilbur and Orville Wright experiment with aerodynamic surfaces to control an airplane in flight.
A vertical stabilizer or fin is a vertical wing-like surface mounted at the rear of the plane and typically protruding above it.
Sir Hiram Maxim built a craft that weighed 3.5 tons, with a 110-foot (34 m) wingspan that was powered by two 360-horsepower (270 kW) steam engines driving two propellers.
A fuselage, a long, thin body, usually with tapered or rounded ends to make its shape aerodynamically smooth