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Invention of TV (Philo Farnsworth)
The word “television” first appeared in 1907 in the discussion of a theoretical device that transported images across telegraph or telephone wires. Ironically, this prediction was behind the times, as some of the first experiments into television used radio waves from the beginning. https://historycooperative.org/the-first-tv-a-complete-history-of-television/ -
First Laptop (Alan Kay)
in 1976 while working at Xerox PARC (Palo Alto Research Center), calling it the Dynabook. He helped develop a prototype of his Dynabook, which was officially named the Xerox Note Taker. https://www.computerhope.com/history/laptop.htm -
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Nintendo Gaming System (Nintendo)
The Nintendo 64 was a home game console developed by Nintendo that was released in the U.S. in September 1996. It was the successor to the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. It was the last major game console to use cartridges as its main storage format until the Nintendo Switch, which was released in 2017. https://history-computer.com/nintendo-64-guide/ -
Motorola Razr (Motorola )
he original Razr model (then styled RAZR), the Razr V3, was a flip phone released in 2004 with a remarkably thin and fashionable look. It became extremely popular, leading to the release of a variety of different Razr models. The line was succeeded by the Motorola Razr2 flip phones in 2007. The Razr later evolved into a line of non-flip devices in 2011, Droid Razr https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motorola_Razr -
Motorola Droid (Motorola)
The Motorola Droid (GSM/UMTS version: Motorola Milestone) is an Internet and multimedia-enabled smartphone designed by Motorola, which runs Google's Android operating system. The Droid had been publicized under the codenames Sholes and Tao[4][5] and the model number A855 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motorola_Droid