Ah yes, it failed so bad that it has surpassed every nation on Earth in economic power and military strength. As of 2023, the US has a GDP of about $26 trillion. Meanwhile, Europe has a collective GDP of about $18 trillion as of 2023. Imagine a country having more strength than an entire continent. I don't even want to imagine how lopsided the comparison would be if we chose any individual European country instead.
wait until he finds out that most derived units in the metric system are named after invetors like Farad after Michael Faraday or the Watt after James Watt - both of them were mentioned in the video
Actually first he stole the design from Swan & sold them as his own invention but then lost a patent infringement case in court. After that he had to do a licencing deal with Swan to continue selling them.
Well, on this list, they're claiming that Alexander Graham Bell (a Scot) and Michael Faraday (an Englishman) were Americans, aswell as the outright lie that an abolute charlatan like Edison invented the lightbulb
Michael Faraday was born in England to British parents, lived his his life in UK and died there too. I can't see where he's American. I'm not a flag waver, but that's definitely a stolen one. 😮
@@artsed08 NO. Unless you're really into vendelzwaaien,* nobody should excessively wave them, because hyperpatriotic bullshyte is just plain stupid & can cause wars. *en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flag_throwing
Edison did not invent the electric light bulb, he did however improve it by using a vacuum drawn glass bulb to make it brighter and last longer. Alexander Graham Bell did not invent the Telephone but he was the first to patent it. In many parts of the World Air Conditioning is only used where temperature controlled envoirenments are needed to test electronics. The Principle for microwave ovens was discovered in the UK by Radar operators but never taken further.
first public demonstration of a telephone in germany was by Phillipp Reis in 1861. Alexander Graham Bell got a patent for his version of the telephone in 1876. and the italian Antonio Meucci started patent registration in 1871 but couldn't afford it. thus (as is the case with many inventions) many people invent the same thing around the same time, and mostly build upon the work of others, but only one becomes famous, eg because he could afford registering a patent, or because he had better publicity, etc
1835, James Bowman Lindsay became the inventor of the world's first electric incandescent light bulb. He did not patent it and Edison took James's plans improved them slightly and patent it
@@richardjohnson2026 Edison's patent was from 1879, which was an improvement on a lightbulb which Joseph Swan had patented 10 years earlier. Other precursors of lightbulbs were as early as 1802 (Humphry Davy), and also 1854 by the german Heinrich Göbel who put a bamboo filament in a glass bulb. And in 1875 Herman Sprengel invented the vacuum pumps to finally make lightbulbs practical. Thus it took most of a century and many inventors to invent it and improve on other older versions, and only one of them became famous as the "sole inventor" of the lightbulb, after all the components came together, including vacuum pumps and power generation and whatever else was necessary.
In my opinion the printing press (Johannes Gutenberg 1450, Germany) is on the same level as the internet, in terms of how far it has brought humanity. That allowed cheap widespread knowledge to educate everybody.
@@xCLiCH3Eprinting press 🇩🇪 China had an original version too but Germany more popular Same with football ⚽ 1863 English modern version of what they played But cricket 🏏 is 100% English
I agree, the press and Protestantism (for Protestants it was a duty to read the sacred scriptures independently, so more and more people learned to read, things went much worse in Catholic countries) were the indispensable bases on which a public opinion was slowly formed, always more freed from the narrative of power in force in those eras, it laid the foundations for future democracies. At the end of the 19th century in Italy 90-95% of the population was illiterate, while in Germany it was the exact opposite, around 90% of people were literate
13:35 Fermi was not American, he was Italian, he was not interested in politics, but like everyone else in those times he had to be a member of the fascist party to work, he emigrated to the USA not to escape repression but because the government stopped financing his projects as it should. In America he was integrated into the Manhattan project and was always controlled by the American secret police until the end of the war. He had dual citizenship, he was not American
inventions credit goes to the country where they are invented though, not the individual. Penicillin was actually multiplied/made usable by an Aussie, but because he was part of Fleming's team. working there, Australia doesn't get credit for inventing antibiotics. Plenty of other examples like that available
It blows my mind how someone has the audacity to publish a video about national inventions and didn’t bother doing the necessary research into the inventors. So many of these are attributed to nations that the inventor was not even a citizen of.
I think that the nation shown is the place that sponsored the invention. For example Fermi was italian but he was part of the Manhattan project and there he invented nuclear reactors. So the inventor is italian but the invention is american because they paid him and provided him with the equipment, if this makes sense. I'm italian and studing physics so on Fermi I'm quite sure, I don't know for the others
@@Niraol who invented the actual system we use to distribute electricity. Without him, and if we followed Edison's idea, we would have burned out all fossil fuel some decades ago
So many of these attributed to the US are actually British! The guy who made that video didn't do his research but probably just went off what her always been told!...😤🇬🇧
Motion camera given to the UK is a joke! Same for the steam engine, which was improved in the UK, but not invented there, but no need to argue, most inventions come about gradually in different nations, it's a collective endeavour, but that fact doesn't jive well with chauvinists.
Sorry to say Alexander Graham Bell is from Scotland, UK. He migrated from Scotland, yes but to CANADA! He then went to the USA to create the Telephone but he never actually lived in the USA for an extended amount of time.
According to Wikipedia Alexander Graham Bell was a British citizen in 1872 when he got the first patent for the telephone. He didn’t become an American citizen until 1882. 😊
@@stefanb4375 as a german I’m not even mad how much stuff like this they left out about Germany, but instead I’m mad about how hard they try to credit USA for everything… this attitude is exactly why American schools are failing… well that and the pew pew
Earle Dickson invented the “Band Aid” (as in the product), however that was not the first plaster made to take care of small wounds. The origins of the concept go way back to ancient Egypt where they used fabric soaked in honey and oils to aid their wounds. The first modern plaster (band aid) was invented in 1882 in Germany by Paul C. Beiersdorf. That’s nearly 40 years earlier than Dicksons Band Aid.
@@josipmoskatelo Willis carrier- air cooling 1902 Sergei brin, Larry page - Google 1998 Norman woodland - barcode Ray Tomlinson - email Thomas Jefferson - swiveling chair Adolf Rickenbacker - electric guitar Roger Easton - gps Christopher scholes - qwerty keyboard 🇺🇸
@@josipmoskatelo Made in usa Willis carrier- air cooling 1902 Sergei brin, Larry page - Google 1998 Norman woodland - barcode Ray Tomlinson - email Thomas Jefferson - swiveling chair Adolf Rickenbacker - electric guitar Roger Easton - gps Benjamin Franklin - bifocals,lightning rod Dankmar Adler, Louis Sullivan - skyscrapers Christopher scholes - qwerty keyboard 🇺🇸 And Einstein, Vladimir zworikyn, Issac Asimov, Alexander Graham bell, sergei brin, Tesla made it huge in USA
WHOA! Alexander Graham Bell was born in Scotland and was educated at two different British universities. United Kingdom (1847-1922) British-subject in Canada (1870-1882) United States (1882-1922)
Saying the US "invented airplanes" is kinda ridiculous and a gross simplification. No country really did, it was the result of constant research and improvements from the 1880s to the 1900s. The Wright brothers were just a part of that process. Also, they missed some very important inventions (like the printing press or photography), and included some "meh" inventions.
True. But the first person to fly was Otto von Lilienthal. Everything that came after was based on his findings. You “just” had to put these and the combustion engine together. What the Right brothers "invented" was the control system for the flight train.
and even then Otto Lilienthal built a functional glider almost 10 years before the wright brothers almost 100 years before that George Cayley built a functional glider (but with no human aboard)
Yes - 'inventions' rarely come out of nowhere. Mostly the claimed 'inventor' is just making one step of an ongoing process of technological evolution but for various reasons becomes the name associated with early developments in that technology. Quite often it's the person who was able to commercialise it best, meaning their variant is the one that becomes the standard - not that they were the one who made the key leap in engineering. Edison and Bell for instance.
@@jbird4478 Some inventions are more like that than others, and some weren't even invented at precise moment, since they were just the result of continuous slight increments. To take a concrete example, it's hard not to credit Heron of Alexandria with the first steam machine, or not to credit the guy who invented canned food in the early 1800s. They did it almost from 0, even if nothing is never from 0 fondamentally speaking but by that I just mean they did most of the job. As opposed to that, inventions such as the car, photography, cinema, the computer or planes, had dozen of people making equally important breakthroughs, so it would be very unfair to just credit it to one guy. It's done regardless to make history simpler for the mob, and sometimes because there's an agenda ("that guy from my country did it blablabla"). I mean, regarding planes in particular, crediting the Wright brothers is very misleading, other planes did fly before them, and it was just a "race" for who would make the most practical plane first. Some say it's Santos-Dumont (his model didn't require a catapult) some say the wright brothers, some say it's others before them even if those versions weren't very fonctional. I think the Wright brothers made important advances, but not more than those before them and than those after them (just 2 years after they presented their plane, the Wright brothers' model was already obsolete and replaced by better concepts).
Mate, how can you not know the A. Nobel dynamite story? He read an article in the press that was made to look like his obituary and with the title "The Merchant of Death and Destruction" or something like that, and he realized the destructive legacy that he will leave behind. So, in his will, he left his fortune to be used as reward for those who confer the "greatest benefit on mankind" in PEACE, physics, chemistry, physiology or medicine and literature. So, we could say that the Nobel prizes are a consequence of the fact that he invented the dynamite.
Btw dynamite is improved nitroglycerin which is unstable to even move, and gun powder is something totally different. Nobel made nitroglycerin transportable and safer to use. Ryan seems to be confused about those two: gun powder and dynamite.
@@mehere8038 This video was clearly focused on more modern inventions (as well as significant ones around the time of the industrial revolution). It is true that most of the major technological breakthroughs were done by either the soviets or the Americans. The soviet breakthroughs were mainly done by their military and this video clearly wasn't showing off military inventions so obviously the US would dominate it. (the only reason they weren't the only ones here was because they went all the way back to the industrial revolution where europe dominated the technological breakthroughs. If you went back 100 years before then europe would almsot entirely be making up the list. If you went back 1000 years after that then it would most certainly be the arab states, china and some parts of india which dominate. Another 500 years would be the romans, han and mauryans.) You get the point, the US dominates because they focused on the period of time where the US was at the cutting edge of technology. (they still are, most of the worlds breakthroughs are happening either in the US or Europe due to their large research institutions. China is catching up aswell, but as of right now that's all they're doing. Catching up.)
@@shaaravguha3760 wtf are you on? Please tell me you don't actually belive that? Tell me who invented the working electric refrigerator wifi latex gloves goggle maps CPAP machines pacemakers iron lung ventilator cochlear ear black box flight recorders spray on skin medical ultrasound duel flush toilets polymer money gene silencing antiviral/flu meds radar system to detect stealth aircraft EXELGRAM (anti-counterfeiting tech) blast glass cervical cancer vacinne quantum bit quantum logic gate ATM machines Frazer lens (allows near & far objects to be simultaniously in focus in films) digital product activation multi-focal contact lenses Polilight forensic lamp (used to detect fingerprints at crime scenes & analyse paintings to see additional paintings under them & erased paint of writing) baby safety capsule for cars airplane emergency escape slide frozen embryo baby hovering rocket microwave landing system (what all planes/airports use to land planes when visibility is poor) wine cask plastic glasses lenses braces for teeth solar hot water systems sunscreen granny smith apple secret ballot voting ghost bat military figher jet/drone combo mass producable cardboard stealth attack drone (in use in Ukraine) got it yet? That's only a part list of course, but that entire list is from a single country that didn't get a SINGLE mention in this video. Do you honestly think not a single one of those inventions was more worthy of the list than the bandaid? Figured out what country that list is from yet? Here's an extra tip, they also invented the winged keel for sailing boats & used it in a certain yatch race the US had won eternally until that invention. I could list off a tonne more inventions from the same country or from other countries also not mentioned in this video. Tell me you honestly think the US is inventing more than the above in terms of revolutionary, life changing inventions in global use today & note that the population of the country that invented all the above is 13 times less than that of the US, with only 27 million people & only coming into existance in 1901 Lets see you come up with a list that long for US inventions of equal importance to the world as those above! Not possible, is it! The US is good at selling itself, NOT inventing stuff! It lags WAY below the world in the number of inovations!
The pedal bicycle was also invented by a Scot. The invention Germany gave was the Swiftwalker, which needed the rider to propel the bike using their feet on the ground.
I think it’s hard to say anyone really invented them, maybe they refined the process and showed scientifically their effectiveness but all over the world poor people had been vaccinating themselves against cow pox etc for generations in farming communities.
Why was it called vaccination then? The smallpox vaccine was invented in 1796 by English physician Edward Jenner. It was the first of the vaccines. He was the first to publish evidence that it was effective and to provide advice on its production.
@@sandgrownun66 Because he used the knowledge of the farm workers. They got cowpox, which gave them immunity to smallpox. Vacca is the latin for cow. Jenner vaccinated James Phipps, an 8 year-old, with cowpox. Once his fever had gone, Jenner started injecting him with smallpox material. He didnt get it. It was done again, after some time, and still no infection was caused.
As others have said lots of errors in this, and as you said Ryan very difficult to assign many of these inventions, particularly since the late 1800’s, to one person. A critical thing is who got the patent in first. Edison was notoriously good at this, e.g the lightbulb, but to his credit he was a greater improver of other people’s inventions. Alexander Graham Bell (born Scottish) was working on the telephone with many others, he applied for a patent for something that he knew didn’t work hoping he could get it to work. He did. He seemed to have a close relationship with the Patent Office which helped. His wife was deaf, so he bizarrely “invented” something which was totally useless to her. He wondered why she never answered the phone. The biggest horrendous error in this was to call Micheal Faraday an American. To us Scientists and Engineers (in the U.K. but I believe worldwide) , Micheal Faraday is a hero. He didn’t just invent the electric motor but established the fundamental principles of electromagnetism on which the modern world is founded. He is up there with Newton, Darwin and Einstein. I don’t believe he ever left the U.K, let alone become American.
adding on that: Femi was Italian so nuclear reactors are not really a US invention (although Fermi was working in US). Internet hasn't been invented in the US as well but at the CERN (by a Belgian if I remember correctly)
@@tamibenz6626Now that is an interesting question. I don’t think Edison really stole anything from Tesla, but Tesla worked for Edison and they had a fundamental breakup over electricity. Edison thought the future was DC and Tesla was for AC, so Tesla went to Westinghouse to promote AC, and the past 100 years has proven Tesla right. Westinghouse didn’t appreciate him either and he died in a hotel room in poverty. I should be pleased that Elon Musk has resurrected his name, but I just don’t like Elon Musk. There is a movie about Tesla but can’t remember the name. I think it was on Netflix.
@@Ali-ew3oe Actually the internet was invented by the american DARPA, what CERN invented was the world-wide-web (www) which is build as part (or maybe on top of) the internet.
@@Usabby1776So if a cat is born in a doghouse, it’s suddenly a dog? Edit: Before you come to argue back with “the two aren’t the same species so it doesn’t count”, feel free to switch up “cat” to husky and “dog” to german shepherd, as the species (lupus familiaris) is the same. My point remains.
14:18 = Alan Turing invented the Turing machine in England during World War II. With this calculating machine he was able to crack the German encryption machine Enigma, which shortened the war by years
The original video I think was not very good because it did not mention the printing press. The printing press, invented by German goldsmith Johannes Gutenberg in the year 1436, is arguable one of the most important inventions. It's right up there with the steam engine and the internet in terms of the revolutionary ripple effects it caused. It facilitated the mass-production of books and mass-spread of knowledge, and caused an information revolution. I'm not even German yet I feel frustrated lmao
@@MrEversNo. It was different. Gutenberg's version had interchangable letters whereras the early European and Chinese printing press only could copy a set of pre-made scripts.
for the telephone Antonio Meucci an Italian had created the prototype , this is a translated article : The invention of the telephone was at the center of a long controversy between the Italian Antonio Meucci and the American Alexander Graham Bell. In 1834 Meucci began working on this project in Florence, and then perfected it in Cuba, where he arrived as a political refugee. Meucci built several prototype telephones that he submitted to the American company Western Union Telegraph Company asking for funding. The company not only gave him a negative response, but also told him that it had lost its prototypes. In 1876, however, a former Western Union employee, Alexander Graham Bell, who had examined Meucci's devices, patented the telephone! Only in 2002 did the United States Congress officially recognize, albeit very belatedly, that Meucci was the inventor of the telephone.
Volt (the unit) is named after Volta, just as the Ampere is named after Ampere, the Coulumb after Coulumb and the Watt after Watt (and the Newton after Newton)
The history of artificial refrigeration dates back to the 18th century. Scottish professor William Cullen designed a small refrigerating machine in 1755
1:48 Before pendulum clocks existed, people had to use things like sun dials, water clocks, candles, hourglasses and so on to measure time. Spring-driven clocks already existed, but they were really inaccurate before Huygens incorporated the pendulum, which provided a massive increase in precision. To help you understand the importance of this, consider being a businessman who is trying to schedule half a dozen meetings in an afternoon. Having a good clock means your grasp on time moves from using generic terms like "dawn", "noon" and "dusk" to something like "01:48 PM" - this makes everything much more efficient.
The way I look at a pendulum, is like using a Metronome when I'm playing music. It keeps me in time. The pendulum does the same thing, but for the clocks hands.
@@adrianboardman162 Yeah, you're right. It's the same thing. Fun fact about Huygens: when he was a child, he received a liberal education which included studying music. So it's possible that he followed the same thought process as you.
The pendulum accuracy also permit lots and lots of progress in science and shipping navigation (The time of the day is crucial in the position calcul with sun or stars). In those domains accuracy is crucial.
@@JoachimTHIBAULT Pendulum clocks don't work well on ships, though. The first really precise maritime watches made by John Harrison were spring-powered and used balance wheels.
@@BrokenCurtain I'm Autistic, so I'm probably thinking a bit too outside the box, But it does make sense that a metronome set to 120 (2 beats, or Tick Tocks) a minute would equals 60 seconds, or a minute. I'd need to properly look into it.
4:22 "Alessandro Volta - cool name for a battery inventor" is in itself the most American comment possible. 😂 (I really hope you meanwhile realised that the physical unit is named after the inventor to honour his invention.)
so, for Brazil the inventor of the airplane is Santos Dummont with his 14-Bis. His plane lifted off the ground by itself without the need of an external propeller like the machine manufactured by the Wright brothers.
The person who created this video must have come up with many of these inventors nationalities off the top of his head with no actual research as he changed some nationalities to American when almost everyone knows that they were not
this guy didnt do reseach at all lol. Telescope is a UK invention? yeah no fat change. it was created in the Netherlands by Hans Lippershey in 1608. The Microscope was also invented in the netherlands by Dutch Father-Son team, Hans and Zaccharias Jansen in 1590s.
@@marekvojta9648 They used it to explain what DNA and genetic material was back when it was a very new science that most people didn't understand yet: It identifies an individual the same way fingerprints do. It was the easiest way to explain to a jury how reliable DNA was as evidence in criminal cases where the defendant had used gloves to avoid leaving fingerprints. It was easy to understand, so the word "fingerprint" stuck.
@@Arltratlo Well I'm having English as my second language that's why it confused me. We call it literally DNA analysis (well we also know that Europe is not in middle of Earth and apart form Americans😉😀so that's probably why we use more descriptive name)
John Logie Baird (13 August 1888 - 14 June 1946) was a Scottish inventor, electrical engineer, and innovator who demonstrated the world's first live working television system on 26 January 1926.He went on to invent the first publicly demonstrated colour television system and the first viable purely electronic colour television picture tube.
Here are seven revolutionary inventions for which Tesla was not given due credit. Electricity (AC) The Electric Motor. ... The Transistor. ... Neon Signs. ... Radio. ... Radar. ... X-Rays.
No, Tesla was awesome but wasn't responsible for most of the things you mentioned here. You need to look into these things for yourself instead of blindly repeating things you hear.
One example is radio, Tesla had the first public demonstration in 1893. Maybe you should research. Even workers in one of the first transatlantic radio stations in Iceland, which I visited 5 years ago, are saying that Tesla should get credit for that invention.
A point to note: The device that produces microwaves inside a microwave oven - the cavity magnetron is a British invention, without this we wouldn't have the oven. It was invented and intended for use in high power radars. A prototype was loaned to the US for experimentation and during these experiments a candy bar melted in the pocket of a scientist, this gave him the idea for the oven. A world-changing invention that wasn't mentioned was the escape wheel clock. Unlike pendulum clocks, these are not affected by movement, this allowed accurate time keeping aboard ships and made accurate longitude plotting and hence precise sea navigation possible. By knowing exactly what time it was at Greenwich (GMT) and checking for local high noon with a a sextant, you knew how many degrees West or East you were.
@@jimmyb640 Scotland is both inside Great Britain and part of the United Kingdom. What is your point? (apart from the fact that it was invented in Birmingham, England, United Kingdom).
I'm shocked how anyone ever thought that someone as consequential as Michael Faraday was anything but English. You learn about Faraday in late primary school and onwards. I don't think he even ever left England let alone travelling to America.
And John Loggy Baird who invented the telephone was Scottish, not American. Someone need to do their homework. Humphry Davy invented the first electric lightbulb in the UK in 1802
The Wright brothers didn't "invent" aircraft. There was competition in several countries for people to produce a powered aircraft. The Wright brothers's design was the most successful as it stayed in the air for roughly the same distance as the wingspan of a modern jet.
Well actually Gustav Weißkopf was earlier and flew over a higher distance several articles in newspapers document this his flight wasn´t filmed but stated.
USA - A country where : One in five cannot locate the US on a world map. One in seven think Chocolate milk comes from brown cows. One in twelve think they can beat a Grizzly Bear in a bare handed fight. LMFAO.
I think you need to find a better video to watch....Edison didn't invent the light bulb, the French invented cinema, a Scot invented the phone, and a Brit invented the electric motor. Very badly researched.
Alexander Graham Bell was Scottish. However most of his work on the telephone was actually in Canada. The lightbulb was invented by Swan in Newcastle, UK. Fair to say Edison made it commercially viable. Regarding AC, its one of the most environmentally damaging inventions. Not only in its electrical consumption but also its direct impact on global warming. Arguably, the first mechanical computer was invented by Babbage in the UK in the 1820s.
Henry Woodward was a Canadian med student who invented the lightbulb based on Swan's work and others. He was too poor to see it through himself. He patented his lightbulb in Canada in 1874, and later in the US in 1876. When the US patent was filed, Edison was told about it. Edison and five colleagues spent the next 2 years trying to invent a lightbulb to beat Woodward to market. They couldn't figure it out so in 1878 Edison went to Woodward and bought the exclusive rights to Woodward's US patent, promising that Woodward would get the credit and make enough money to sell his lightbulb in Canada and Europe. Edison then took the patent and studied Woodward's design, and also made several small changes which Woodward mentioned he wanted to make. Edison took the new design and filed a patent in 1879. The US Patent Office decided there were just enough changes that it qualified as a separate invention. Edison manufactured and sold his (stolen) design, allowing him to keep all the credit and money for himself.
Inventions never happen in a vacuum, but as a person who knows a thing or 2 about computer science, I would still say, that Konrad Zuse invented the computer because his computer works pretty much exactly the same way modern computers today do, something the previous inventions just didn't.
The first light bulb wss not by Edison but invented by Joseph Swan an English inventor who also installed the first domestic lighting systems in the World- to quote from Wikipedia: "His house, Underhill, Low Fell, Gateshead, was the world's first to have working light bulbs installed. The Lit & Phil Library in Westgate Road, Newcastle, was the first public room lit by electric light during a lecture by Swan on 20 October 1880. In 1881 he founded his own company, The Swan Electric Light Company, and started commercial production."
In reality Edison was a fake and contributed next to nothing. He merely worked in a patent office and stole others ideas, hiding the original patent firms and claiming he invented them.
Made in usa Willis carrier- air cooling 1902 Sergei brin, Larry page - Google 1998 Norman woodland - barcode Ray Tomlinson - email Thomas Jefferson - swiveling chair Adolf Rickenbacker - electric guitar Roger Easton - gps Benjamin Franklin - bifocals,lightning rod Dankmar Adler, Louis Sullivan - skyscrapers Christopher scholes - qwerty keyboard 🇺🇸
@@KygoCalvinHarris-xu4kv Tim Berners-Lee (UK; CERN) HTTP + WWW Foundation (No WWW = no Google); Lewis Essen, Jack Perry (NPL UK) - cesium Atomic clock (no Atomic clock = no GPS); Michael Faraday (UK)- electromagnetic coil = pickup = electric guitar; The tower of Nevyansk had a lightning rod in 1745 and Prokop Diviš built one on Monrovia in 1754 (Franklin invented it for the US); QWERTY keyboard is not useful on modern keyboards, only on mechanical typewriters to prevent mechanical key interlock, Alphabetic keyboards are of more use now, but in early computing it was thought that they would be used by trained typists forever so we're stuck with them; Eugene Emanuel Viollet-le-Duc Suggested the first Skyscraper type building; in his lectures in the early 19th C; UK experimental engineers Gordon, Faraday and Henry - early electric motor later developed elsewhere - (no motors = no Aircon); Swivel chair -Wow. John Shepherd-Barron - 1967 invented and installed first ATM at Barclays Bank, London (copied by US engineer Don Wetzel in 1968). Every inventor stands on the shoulders of earlier pioneers back to the Stone Age.
As a university professor, I was giving a course in East Africa on wildlife ecology for a class consisting of half Eastern African and half European students. During a break, I overheard a heated argument about who invented the most important stuff first. Suddenly a calm Tanzanian said, well we invented the use of fire for cooking and heating... And the discussion stopped. The Africans won!
@@alexwtf80 lol- We know Neanderthals used fire to cook their food. I mean it's kinda dumb to even claim something like that anyway, I doubt we really know who really was the first to cook food as we're taking tens of thousands of years ago and archeologists aren't gong to find every fire pit with food left behind. We only can get a rough idea where/when some people were doing it.
@fredmidtgaard5487 It's very unlikely that fire and cooking got "invented" in this part of Africa. I would even rule this out. Anyway, there are tons of misconceptions and false narratives in terms of history and who invented what. For instance, neither the compass, nor paper or gun powder were invented in China. This is illusional. Until the Manchu intruded in China in the 17th century (coming from Tibet), bringing along civilisation, China was presumbly in a Stone Age condition before that, or maybe on a early, primitive agriculture level.
it is clear that this video was made in the US and they got a lot wrong besides they left out very important inventions that were not invented in the US. in the Netherlands were more than 2 inventions as mentioned in this list, for example the fire hose, the microscope, the telescope, the audiotape, videotape, cd, blueray , wifi and bluetooth, the submarine, the Stock Exchange, the artificial heart and many more
all 3 vyou say its not but they are philips invented the audiotape and the videotape and than the cd and the artificial heart was infented by willwem kolff who also invented the artificial kidney@@rmyikzelf5604
1. The Stock Exchange was invented by the Italians in medieval time, under the Medici family, that also inventing the Banking system. 2. The CD was invented by James Russel. An American. 3. The telescope was invented by an Italian Galileo Galilei, that showed publicly his first telescope prototype in Venice in 1603. 4. The first artificial heart was invented by a Russian, Vladimir Demichov in 1937.
The word "paper" is derived from the Greek, "papyrus". Papyrus is a plant, common along waterways and was used by Egyptians as early as the 4th millennium BCE to write upon.
I guess it's not about having some flat, plant-based sheet to write on, but the particular manufacturing process: Unlike papyrus (and similar things from different fibers that existed in Asia), paper wasn't woven, but it was made from pulp - which allowed for easier and cheaper production of it.
Papyrus rolls were too costly, difficult to manufacture and fragile to become widely used. Paper instead was the reason people learned to write and read and knowledge become progressively accessible to common people.
@@drsnova7313dude egyptians got chinese nuts handed over to them😂😂😂 😂 paper was never invented by chinese and nobody whose history dates back to 2000years or more don't recognise it... paper was not invented by them it's just that their process was different...😂😂😂
Also while paper made from rags, mullberry and other materials may have been invented in what is today China, modern paper made from wood pulp is a complete different technology and was invented in Europe during a long process step by step by French, British and Germans.
I know it's probably been stated below but James Watt (from my home town, Greenock Scotland) is recognized as making the steam engine more efficient and Alexander Graham Bell was Scottish. John Logie Beard (Scottish) is also recognised as the inventor of TV. Fleming (Scottish) discovered Penicillin. As Winston Churchill said "Of all the small nations of this earth, perhaps only the ancient Greeks surpass the Scots in their contribution to mankind"
The excessive use of AC in North America is astounding. When in motels in both Canada and the US (from the UK) we were kept awake by the AC in adjacent rooms thrumming all night when it absolutely was not needed. It was neither too hot or too cold. I think it is a case of habitual use.
I lived in San Diego and every Summer I had to take a wool sweater with me to wear on the Trolley or in a supermarket. At the movies the chill, .loud sound track and buckets of pop corn took some getting used to (in Raiders the darts coming at you were very cool) On a lighter mood, girls come to bed with cold feet all over the world.
Alfred Nobel developed dynamite as a safer way of transporting nitro glycerine. Nitro was quite unstable and often didn't get delivered successfully because it exploded en route. Nobel soaked clay in nitro thereby stabilising it for transport.
Sorry but 3 of the inventions claimed by the US are wrong. Michael Faraday inventor of the electric motor was English. Alexander Graham Bell inventor of the telephone was Scottish. There were several light bulbs before Edison made a successful commercial light bulb
Alexander Graham Bell came up with the telephone in Canada, only developing it in Boston. He was born in Scotland, and passed away in Nova Scotia, Canada. Technically, it should say that the telephone was invented both in Canada and the US.
Michael Faraday, inventor of the motor, was British, not American. Marco i was in Britain when he developed the radio, the first transmission was In Somerset, UK.
Michael Faraday {born September 22, 1791, Newington Butts, United Kingdom - died August 25, 1867, London, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland} was an English physicist and chemist. He was Sir Humphry Davy's assistant.
And it hasn't reached the Russian countryside yet, they still have to go outside in -30 degrees and sit in a wooden shed out in the yard to relieve themselves.
I think they missed what I consider to be Australia's greatest invention - the disposable latex glove. There are billions of them used everyday from hospitals to garages to kitchens etc etc.
There’s 60 Australian inventions on google. Someone should put them on UA-cam. Even some surprised me, and I’m an Aussie. Check ‘em out. It’s titled - 60 Great Australian Inventions. Here’s a few 😊 7. Inflatable Escape Slide: 9. Baby Safety Capsule: 17. Electronic Cardiac Pacemaker: 18. Spray on Skin: Professor Fiona Wood, a burns specialist at Royal Perth Hospital, along with scientist Marie stoner invented spray on skin in 1993. They were awarded the Clunies Ross Award for their contribution to medical science 44. Google Maps: In 2003 Lars and Jens Rasmussen through their Sydney company, Where 2 Technologies developed software that was acquired by Google to become Google Maps. (And my fav, the most simple) 40. Notebook - the Paper Pad not the Computer: In 1902 J.A. Bircall, a Launceston stationer invented the humble cardboard backed, top glued notepad. Birchalls, recognised as Australia's oldest bookshop, having opened for business in November of 1844 still exists today. 😊
@@davidnelson7786 And where would the world be without the notepad🤔 Created in 1902, the notepad was the doing of Launceston stationery company JA Birchall, who thought to take loose sheets of paper, cut them in half and glue them onto a cardboard backing for quick and easy notetaking. Genius.
“Alan Mathison Turing OBE FRS (/ˈtjʊərɪŋ/; 23 June 1912 - 7 June 1954) was an English mathematician, computer scientist, logician, cryptanalyst, philosopher and theoretical biologist.[6] Turing was highly influential in the development of theoretical computer science, providing a formalisation of the concepts of algorithm and computation with the Turing machine, which can be considered a model of a general-purpose computer.[7][8][9] He is widely considered to be the father of theoretical computer science and artificial intelligence.” More on Wikipedia.
@@m0t0b33 Hmmm ... It's not their farts that are methane-laden, but their burps. Cows technically only have one stomach, but it has four distinct compartments made up of Rumen, Reticulum, Omasum and Abomasum, and they feed of hyper-high fiber grass (in an ideal world as, nowadays! ...) that they take ages to digest. There is far too much cattle on this earth!
@@m0t0b33 No, in the USA they started to make meat in laboratories, using cell culture (actual fact). There is no cows anymore in their fields. Only burgers.
@timjohnathan If you don't want to harm animals, be a vegetarian. And before making meat in tubes, start by fighting the abusive food industry in the USA, which is one of the worst in the world. You obviously can't have your bottle and drink it at the same time, it is one or the other. This is the next step after the oversized vegetables that taste nothing, the grey salmon colored with carcinogenic chemicals, and the overall poisoned food that make people sick and fat. The USA is an overall disgusting place, and this is only one of the reasons why. Thankfully, most of the world has laws against these atrocities. Now, you can do whatever you want since such things are obviously going to be banned elsewhere, but i know for sure there is a place i would never go even if paid a million (and i am being serious, too).
Alexander Graham Bell (telephone) was a British inventor. John Logie Baird was the Brit who invented the television. Lightbulb wasn’t invented by Edison but he patoned it.
Humphry Davy demonstrated the first incandescent light to the Royal Institute in Great Britain, using a bank of batteries and two charcoal rods. The INVENTOR was therefore British, and yes, Edison tweaked the design and patented it.
1:46 The pendulum keeps the clock running at a constant speed. Without a pendulum mechanical clocks were wildly inaccurate. It's a vital invention because it heralded the beginning of true mechanical time-keeping which changed the world drastically.
7:50 mistake. The telephone was invented by Antonio Meucci, an Italian, he worked in Cuba and New York, patented first the "talking telegraph" and then the "telettrofono", founded a company in America and held the patents for years, then the business stopped they went as well as he hoped, the investors were missing and he lost the patent because he lacked the 10 dollars needed to renew the patent, and only at that point, with an expired patent that Alexander Bell was able to patent his telephone, if Meucci had renewed the patent the commission he would never have granted the patent right to Bell. You can also find it written on Wikipedia. So who is the inventor of the first electrical system for carrying the voice? Tell me?
Generations of children in the United States were raised to revere Alexander Graham Bell as the inventor of the telephone. They learned about how his work with the deaf led to interest about the artificial transmission of sound, and how he filed the first patent for the telephone in 1876. But while Bell may have been the first to patent the telephone, he was not the first to have invented it. That honor goes to a little-known Italian immigrant named Antonio Meucci. After moving from Italy to Staten Island in 1850, Meucci began to experiment with the electromagnetic transmission of sound. In 1856, he succeeded in building a functioning telephone which he described in his notes: It consists of a vibrating diaphragm and an electrified magnet with a spiral wire that wraps around it. The vibrating diaphragm alters the current of the magnet. These alterations of current, transmitted to the other end of the wire, create analogous vibrations of the receiving diaphragm and reproduce the word. (translated) Meucci developed over 30 different types of telephones, but began running into financial problems. Unable to secure funding for his invention, it was not until 1871 that he finally applied for protection of his idea. In one of history's most bitter lessons, his caveat omitted any mention that the variable electrical conduction in the transmission wires was to be converted to sound-- the key point of the telephone. Meucci's poor command of English may have been the prime factor in his inability to secure a patent with his poorly-written caveat. To make matters worse, the Western Union affiliate laboratory he had been working with lost the functioning models of his invention. Five years later, Alexander Graham Bell successfully filed his patent for the telephone, and has been credited with its invention ever since. Meucci tried to challenge Bell's claim, but failed in court. He died nearly penniless and unknown to history until 2002, when the US Congress officially recognized him as the true inventor of the telephone.
Not a single mention of Australia: Wi-Fi. In 1992 a determined Australian man by the name of John O' Sullivan and his colleagues at CSIRO group stubbled across Wi-Fi. ... Cochlear Implants. ... Ultrasound scanner. ... Electric drill. ... Google Maps. ... Spray-on skin. And so much more.
Somebody will be along soon to tell you the actress Hedy Lamarr invented Wi-Fi, but she didn't (despite being a very clever woman, some of whose work was eventually incorporated into Bluetooth).
I don't think you can stumble across wifi. It was an adaptation of existing technology in to a protocol. It took the ideas of wired ethernet hubs and adapted them to a different media. That was mostly developed by NCR and Bell. O'Sullivan and his team did invent Orthogonal Mutiplexing though (and has the court judgements and settlements to prove it) which comes in much more useful nowadays when trying to make wifi faster.
Don’t forget that the parachute, the tank, the calculator, the bicycle, the diving suit.... were drawn for the first time by Leonardo da Vinci (Italy) at the end of the 15th century, beginning of the 16th! And the smart card by Roland Moreno (France) in 1974.
Before refrigerators, we used ice boxes. They were metal lined wooden boxes with a purchased block of ice inside. Before we knew how to freeze water into blocks, we cut them from frozen lakes and stored them underground in natural caves.
Traffic lights were invented in London, and first installed there on 9 December 1868. Variants of that design was installed allover the USA in the first two decades of the 20th century. The first *electric* traffic light was developed in 1921 in Salt Lake City, Utah.
@@mehere8038 my first guess would be people obviously… when the electric ones came out, they either lost their jobs or moved in a different department. Actually, they were probably policemen??
6:07 I challenge this fact as being wrong. I Googled it and it says it was Fred W Wolfe in 1913. Also, Australia invented the Coolgardie Safe in the late 1890's which is the premise of how a fridge works.
What you can expect with a country who things invented everything and take credits??? They don't know that in México was invented the birth control pill!!! Hoorray to Australia
OK, some of these are a bit wrong. Despite popular belief, the brothers wright were not necessarily the first to create an airplane. The invention is also attributed to and claimed by, Clément Ader, Gustave Whitehead, and Samuel Langley, who would have been earlier, and Santos Dumont, who invented one later, but this one could actually take off by itself. As for the Internet in its most well known form, the world wide web, it is also claimed by France, though only as the invention of the concept, not the full on creation.
It is generally accepted that television was invented by John Logie Baird, a Scottish scientist. In Australia our TV awards( like your Emmys) are called Logies .
Michael Farady was English Born 22 September 1791 Newington Butts, Surrey, England Died 25 August 1867 (aged 75) Hampton Court, Middlesex, England. HE WAS NOT AMERICAN !
Charles Babbage 26 December 1791 - 18 October 1871) was an English polymath. A mathematician, philosopher, inventor and mechanical engineer, Babbage originated the concept of a digital programmable computer. Babbage is considered by some to be "father of the computer". Babbage is credited with inventing the first mechanical computer, the Difference Engine, that eventually led to more complex electronic designs, though all the essential ideas of modern computers are to be found in Babbage's Analytical Engine, programmed using a principle openly borrowed from the Jacquard loom. Babbage had a broad range of interests in addition to his work on computers
8:15 The lightbulb is very contentious and was almost certainly NOT invented by Edison. Edison had one good quality, he could see when a product was ready to market. He employed hundreds of inventors and scientists and was ruthless about stealing their ideas and getting them to market when they were ready under his name - he filed all the patents so he got the credit. One of his scientists/inventors likely invented the light bulb at roughly the same time as Joseph Swan in the UK, which is why the UK arm of Edison's company was sued by Swan's light bulb company for breaching Swan's UK patent on the light bulb. Edison lost, and tried to counter-sue in the US for Swan breaching the US patent, but they decided to pull out because if Swan could prove prior research they may have lost their American patent. So instead Swan and Edison negotiated a merger and formed the Ediswan company, which manufactured light bulbs in the UK until 1928 when it was purchased by a company that was eventually purchased by Siemens.
As a german I am thinking this video lacks a lot of really important things Germany invented. Here are a few things that were invented in Germany: The printing press. Beer. The motorcycle. The X-ray generator. The diesel engine. Aspirin.The adhesive tape. Toothpaste. The electron microscope. The helicopter. The jet engine. Nuclear fission. The airbag. The tape recording. The mp3 format. The coffe filter. The chip card. 😜
@@cornerro Hans Joachim Pabst von Ohain I confess I never heard about this guy before, but it seems he did invent it. de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hans_Joachim_Pabst_von_Ohain
The Genetic Fingerprinting actually became an idea because of one Croatian officer that for the first time used a criminals fingerprint on a sheet of paper.
You are conflating fingerprinting with genetics. Finger printing was invented in the 1880's in the UK, and it was an Argentinian who reportedly first used it to identify a criminal. Mendel was "the father of genetics", but DNA itself was first discovered by a Swiss scientist in 1869. The general structure of human and other DNA was unconfirmed until UK scientist Rosalind Franklin deciphered the double helical structure using x-ray crystallography in 1952. Crick and Watson built on her work to establish which bases paired to form the helical chemical structure ( also in the UK) . Chromatography (invented in Italy in 1900) was first used in the UK to separate the chemical fragments of DNA with the intent of creating genetic/DNA fingerprints and a British scientist showed in1984 that each person's DNA has a discrete and identifiable set of fragments ( with exception of clones and identical siblings) which when separated using chromatography and highlighted on a chromatogram are known colloquially as the genetic fingerprint. So while the story of a Croatian using the technique to identify a criminal for the first time may or may not be true, DNA "fingerprinting" was invented in the UK but built on the science of individuals from several countries around the world.
Television “Another breakthrough technology that redefined entertainment was the television. There are many inventors who can be attributed to its invention. But it was Scottish inventor John Logie Baird who successfully demonstrated the first working TV system.”
Gustave Whitehead, a German immigrant is said to have invented powered flight before the Wright brothers, and Santos Dumont from Brazil is also proposed as a pre-Wright brothers powered flight pioneer. John Logie-Baird of Scotland invented the television, and the German, Braun, perfected rocket flight.
The first system of traffic signals was installed outside the Houses of Parliament in London on 9 December 1868. In the first two decades of the 20th century, semaphore traffic signals like the one in London were in use all over the United States with each state having its own design of the device.
The development of radar was a collaborative effort, but Sir Robert Watson-Watt, a Scottish physicist, is often credited as the key figure behind its invention. In the mid-1930s, Watson-Watt developed and demonstrated a practical radar system for detecting aircraft, which played a crucial role during World War II. Other contributors to radar technology include German engineer Heinrich Hertz, who proved the existence of electromagnetic waves in the late 19th century, and various scientists and engineers in the United States, Germany, and other countries who made significant advancements in radar technology. So NOT Germany
It is an American dream and a cherished and oft-told tale that the Wright Brothers were the first to fly powered. But it was a German named Gustav Weisskopf
3:36 at this point I don't know if it's going to come up later but I'd say the weaving loom is much more important than the sewing machine personally - powered looms (often powered by water wheels) were what started the industrial revolution and the Jacquard loom of France was extremely important in this as it used holes punched in a long card roll (like a self-playing piano or fairground organ) to control the loom to make patterns in the fabric it wove. The early industrial revolution was powered by the clothing mills of the UK, which were powered by automatic looms. They really do deserve their place in history.
James Harrison, an Australian man, developed a refrigeration system in 1854 that removed ice as an essential component in keeping food and drink products cool.
We, Europeans, even invented the USA 😁 but that failed a bit 😅😂🤣
Massively lol
White people are so overrated sometimes
Ah yes, it failed so bad that it has surpassed every nation on Earth in economic power and military strength. As of 2023, the US has a GDP of about $26 trillion. Meanwhile, Europe has a collective GDP of about $18 trillion as of 2023. Imagine a country having more strength than an entire continent. I don't even want to imagine how lopsided the comparison would be if we chose any individual European country instead.
😂😂😂
It's all Columbus and Vespucci fault... And free will, mostly free will
Michael Faraday was English NOT American!
Enrico Fermi was italian
If you checked his passport, you'd find that he was British. What with English not being a nationality since 1707.
@@redceltnet Ahh shut up you Baahaaa baahaa
Edit: Passports didn't exist then einstein! Only Ambassadors/consulate officials had a sort of passport.
And A.G. Bell was Scottish.
Technically most Americans have British decent so the USA is British
"Alessandro Volta. Cool name for a battery inventor" gotta love the US education system
I know lol It killed me :D
wait until he finds out that most derived units in the metric system are named after invetors
like Farad after Michael Faraday or the Watt after James Watt - both of them were mentioned in the video
To be fair, he did turn it around and wondered if the unit is named after him
😂
@@suit1337 and volt like alessandro volta
Edison didn’t invent the lightbulb, he bought the patent, and then improved the lightbulb.
So he brought it to a point where it was actually useful and could be put into production. That is as good as inventing.
And Bell didn‘t invent the telephone.
Edison only stuck his name on the patent, he didn't actually invent the items.
@@gerardflynn7382 Yeah it was Nicola Tesla who invented that.
Actually first he stole the design from Swan & sold them as his own invention but then lost a patent infringement case in court. After that he had to do a licencing deal with Swan to continue selling them.
I'm shocked America isn't claiming the English language too.
Some do
Well, on this list, they're claiming that Alexander Graham Bell (a Scot) and Michael Faraday (an Englishman) were Americans, aswell as the outright lie that an abolute charlatan like Edison invented the lightbulb
@@brianbrotherston5940 what,, no way.
ASMR language videos. Americans use the US flag to represent English 🙄
but plenty of Americans are proud to speak American!
Michael Faraday was born in England to British parents, lived his his life in UK and died there too. I can't see where he's American. I'm not a flag waver, but that's definitely a stolen one. 😮
hey, you both speak English, you are both entitled to steal from others!
You should be a flag waver 🇬🇧
@@Arltratlothen ts eliot can be Bri' ish ??
Tom Holland American?
@@artsed08 NO.
Unless you're really into vendelzwaaien,* nobody should excessively wave them, because hyperpatriotic bullshyte is just plain stupid & can cause wars.
*en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flag_throwing
They steal everything 😏
Edison did not invent the electric light bulb, he did however improve it by using a vacuum drawn glass bulb to make it brighter and last longer. Alexander Graham Bell did not invent the Telephone but he was the first to patent it. In many parts of the World Air Conditioning is only used where temperature controlled envoirenments are needed to test electronics. The Principle for microwave ovens was discovered in the UK by Radar operators but never taken further.
Yes the people from US take the credit for everything like they the only who invent things. Haha
first public demonstration of a telephone in germany was by Phillipp Reis in 1861.
Alexander Graham Bell got a patent for his version of the telephone in 1876.
and the italian Antonio Meucci started patent registration in 1871 but couldn't afford it.
thus (as is the case with many inventions) many people invent the same thing around the same time, and mostly build upon the work of others, but only one becomes famous, eg because he could afford registering a patent, or because he had better publicity, etc
1835, James Bowman Lindsay became the inventor of the world's first electric incandescent light bulb. He did not patent it and Edison took James's plans improved them slightly and patent it
@@richardjohnson2026 Edison's patent was from 1879, which was an improvement on a lightbulb which Joseph Swan had patented 10 years earlier. Other precursors of lightbulbs were as early as 1802 (Humphry Davy), and also 1854 by the german Heinrich Göbel who put a bamboo filament in a glass bulb. And in 1875 Herman Sprengel invented the vacuum pumps to finally make lightbulbs practical. Thus it took most of a century and many inventors to invent it and improve on other older versions, and only one of them became famous as the "sole inventor" of the lightbulb, after all the components came together, including vacuum pumps and power generation and whatever else was necessary.
Alexandre Graham Bell was actually Scottish.
The pendulum clock was the first truly accurate timepiece ever invented.
It really is up there in terms of historical importance.
yes a Dutch invention Christiaan Huygens invented it.
unless your on a ship
@@squiffy-ys2wq8sw3o In which case Harrison was your man, chalk one up for Yorkshire.
In my opinion the printing press (Johannes Gutenberg 1450, Germany) is on the same level as the internet, in terms of how far it has brought humanity.
That allowed cheap widespread knowledge to educate everybody.
and propaganda, widespread propaganda x)
@@xCLiCH3E lucky no propaganda is spread through the internet.
@@xCLiCH3Eprinting press 🇩🇪
China had an original version too but Germany more popular
Same with football ⚽ 1863 English modern version of what they played
But cricket 🏏 is 100% English
Educate everybody that could read and write
I agree, the press and Protestantism (for Protestants it was a duty to read the sacred scriptures independently, so more and more people learned to read, things went much worse in Catholic countries) were the indispensable bases on which a public opinion was slowly formed, always more freed from the narrative of power in force in those eras, it laid the foundations for future democracies.
At the end of the 19th century in Italy 90-95% of the population was illiterate, while in Germany it was the exact opposite, around 90% of people were literate
13:35 Fermi was not American, he was Italian, he was not interested in politics, but like everyone else in those times he had to be a member of the fascist party to work, he emigrated to the USA not to escape repression but because the government stopped financing his projects as it should. In America he was integrated into the Manhattan project and was always controlled by the American secret police until the end of the war. He had dual citizenship, he was not American
Americans think different about nationality,
if you are fortunate to have skills, they call you American,
if not you are just a immigrant!
Fermi's wife was Jewish and so his relocation was a very
smart and timely move.
Einstein, Ralph Baer and Tesla also came to USA
inventions credit goes to the country where they are invented though, not the individual. Penicillin was actually multiplied/made usable by an Aussie, but because he was part of Fleming's team. working there, Australia doesn't get credit for inventing antibiotics. Plenty of other examples like that available
@@mehere8038 did penicillin improve the population in several countries in last century??
It blows my mind how someone has the audacity to publish a video about national inventions and didn’t bother doing the necessary research into the inventors. So many of these are attributed to nations that the inventor was not even a citizen of.
This is not educational video
I think that the nation shown is the place that sponsored the invention. For example Fermi was italian but he was part of the Manhattan project and there he invented nuclear reactors. So the inventor is italian but the invention is american because they paid him and provided him with the equipment, if this makes sense. I'm italian and studing physics so on Fermi I'm quite sure, I don't know for the others
And including Edisons light bulbs but not Tesla 😂
@@Niraol who invented the actual system we use to distribute electricity. Without him, and if we followed Edison's idea, we would have burned out all fossil fuel some decades ago
@@MrJerichoPumpkin And a lot of cities...
The comments from this guy, is exactly what europeans would expect.
That is not a complement..
Compliment.
So many of these attributed to the US are actually British! The guy who made that video didn't do his research but probably just went off what her always been told!...😤🇬🇧
amen
Bell was Scottish dude ! So many errors in this video it clearly is done by a lazy fat American !
Motion camera given to the UK is a joke! Same for the steam engine, which was improved in the UK, but not invented there, but no need to argue, most inventions come about gradually in different nations, it's a collective endeavour, but that fact doesn't jive well with chauvinists.
Lynn totally agree with you, Alexander Graham Bell was Scottish. The uk invented the web.
@@CHALETARCADE You might argue Savery invented the first useful Steam Engine. The principles were demonstated centuries before.
Sorry to say Alexander Graham Bell is from Scotland, UK.
He migrated from Scotland, yes but to CANADA! He then went to the USA to create the Telephone but he never actually lived in the USA for an extended amount of time.
Yeah and I think he made the very first version prototype in london
He became American😊
The telephone was invented by Antonio Santi Giuseppe Meucci. The invention was recognized only in 2002.
And he wasn't even his actual inventor. Antonio Meucci is the name you're looking for.
I'm a Brit and visited the Bell Homestead at Brantford, Ontario once. They said the first call made was from his Homestead to nearby Paris Ont..
According to Wikipedia Alexander Graham Bell was a British citizen in 1872 when he got the first patent for the telephone. He didn’t become an American citizen until 1882. 😊
Michael Faraday was British too.
Telefon, 1861 Philip Reis, in Frankfurt/Germany... He just has not patented it
Someone invented something, quick relocate them to the USA as soon as possible = this video in short
@@stefanb4375 as a german I’m not even mad how much stuff like this they left out about Germany, but instead I’m mad about how hard they try to credit USA for everything… this attitude is exactly why American schools are failing… well that and the pew pew
Sandy Bell was a Scot who invented/patented the telephone while living in Canada before retiring to the US 🤔🏴🏴
Earle Dickson invented the “Band Aid” (as in the product), however that was not the first plaster made to take care of small wounds. The origins of the concept go way back to ancient Egypt where they used fabric soaked in honey and oils to aid their wounds.
The first modern plaster (band aid) was invented in 1882 in Germany by Paul C. Beiersdorf. That’s nearly 40 years earlier than Dicksons Band Aid.
For Motion Picture Camera, they correctly say Louis Le Prince. However, he was from France, not the US nor Uk.
French-Bashing....
@@sebastiendoquin918 like clearly he was definlty french
Edgard varese - electronic music
Jacques costeau - scuba 🤿
Nicephore niepce - photography 🇨🇵
« Volta cool name for a battery inventor » I can’t stop laughing are they really this clueless in the us ?
Yes 😁
"wow im european and im smarter than every american look how open minded i am" 🤡
Easy to do when your education system is shit, you're locked in your own country like a prison, and live isolated from the rest of the world.
@@josipmoskatelo
Willis carrier- air cooling 1902
Sergei brin, Larry page - Google 1998
Norman woodland - barcode
Ray Tomlinson - email
Thomas Jefferson - swiveling chair
Adolf Rickenbacker - electric guitar
Roger Easton - gps
Christopher scholes - qwerty keyboard
🇺🇸
@@josipmoskatelo
Made in usa
Willis carrier- air cooling 1902
Sergei brin, Larry page - Google 1998
Norman woodland - barcode
Ray Tomlinson - email
Thomas Jefferson - swiveling chair
Adolf Rickenbacker - electric guitar
Roger Easton - gps
Benjamin Franklin - bifocals,lightning rod
Dankmar Adler, Louis Sullivan - skyscrapers
Christopher scholes - qwerty keyboard
🇺🇸
And Einstein, Vladimir zworikyn, Issac Asimov, Alexander Graham bell, sergei brin, Tesla made it huge in USA
Michael Faraday Was born in England lived his entire life in England and died in England. He did invent the Electric motor, in England!
WHOA! Alexander Graham Bell was born in Scotland and was educated at two different British universities. United Kingdom (1847-1922)
British-subject in Canada (1870-1882)
United States (1882-1922)
Fermi was italian tho...
They gave him the american citizenship soon after he moved to the US, when he was already 43.
Also Michael Faraday was British
Strange how Marconi not american🤣🤣 I remember he live in US too.
@@PAINNN666 What?
Saying the US "invented airplanes" is kinda ridiculous and a gross simplification. No country really did, it was the result of constant research and improvements from the 1880s to the 1900s. The Wright brothers were just a part of that process.
Also, they missed some very important inventions (like the printing press or photography), and included some "meh" inventions.
True. But the first person to fly was Otto von Lilienthal. Everything that came after was based on his findings. You “just” had to put these and the combustion engine together. What the Right brothers "invented" was the control system for the flight train.
and even then Otto Lilienthal built a functional glider almost 10 years before the wright brothers
almost 100 years before that George Cayley built a functional glider (but with no human aboard)
That's true for pretty much all inventions. All inventors are standing on the shoulders of giants, as they say.
Yes - 'inventions' rarely come out of nowhere. Mostly the claimed 'inventor' is just making one step of an ongoing process of technological evolution but for various reasons becomes the name associated with early developments in that technology. Quite often it's the person who was able to commercialise it best, meaning their variant is the one that becomes the standard - not that they were the one who made the key leap in engineering. Edison and Bell for instance.
@@jbird4478 Some inventions are more like that than others, and some weren't even invented at precise moment, since they were just the result of continuous slight increments.
To take a concrete example, it's hard not to credit Heron of Alexandria with the first steam machine, or not to credit the guy who invented canned food in the early 1800s. They did it almost from 0, even if nothing is never from 0 fondamentally speaking but by that I just mean they did most of the job.
As opposed to that, inventions such as the car, photography, cinema, the computer or planes, had dozen of people making equally important breakthroughs, so it would be very unfair to just credit it to one guy. It's done regardless to make history simpler for the mob, and sometimes because there's an agenda ("that guy from my country did it blablabla").
I mean, regarding planes in particular, crediting the Wright brothers is very misleading, other planes did fly before them, and it was just a "race" for who would make the most practical plane first. Some say it's Santos-Dumont (his model didn't require a catapult) some say the wright brothers, some say it's others before them even if those versions weren't very fonctional. I think the Wright brothers made important advances, but not more than those before them and than those after them (just 2 years after they presented their plane, the Wright brothers' model was already obsolete and replaced by better concepts).
Edison is known for buying others inventions then patenting and claiming them as his own.
Yes and yes
Buying or stealing.
He was workaholic too. Not just sitting at home and buying them. He was very intelligent too
@@Athenswinslavayes. Intelligent enough to steal them. All he did was patent an idea that was already invented and nothing more.
The real inventer was a german clockmaker. But he had no interest to make money with it. It was only to light his shop
Mate, how can you not know the A. Nobel dynamite story? He read an article in the press that was made to look like his obituary and with the title "The Merchant of Death and Destruction" or something like that, and he realized the destructive legacy that he will leave behind. So, in his will, he left his fortune to be used as reward for those who confer the "greatest benefit on mankind" in PEACE, physics, chemistry, physiology or medicine and literature.
So, we could say that the Nobel prizes are a consequence of the fact that he invented the dynamite.
It seem to me that this Ryan boy was sleeping through his entire school days.
Btw dynamite is improved nitroglycerin which is unstable to even move, and gun powder is something totally different. Nobel made nitroglycerin transportable and safer to use. Ryan seems to be confused about those two: gun powder and dynamite.
I never cease to be amazed at America's ignorance of the outside world. And the complacency that one exhibits.
I’m of the same opinion. History of their own country, is basically all they learn about.
You mean about the flush toilet invented by John Harring ton? That's why lots of people call it the john.😮😅😊
any wonder when even videos they see that are supposed to be about "the world" are like this one & totally skewed to their own country's inventions?
@@mehere8038 This video was clearly focused on more modern inventions (as well as significant ones around the time of the industrial revolution).
It is true that most of the major technological breakthroughs were done by either the soviets or the Americans. The soviet breakthroughs were mainly done by their military and this video clearly wasn't showing off military inventions so obviously the US would dominate it. (the only reason they weren't the only ones here was because they went all the way back to the industrial revolution where europe dominated the technological breakthroughs. If you went back 100 years before then europe would almsot entirely be making up the list. If you went back 1000 years after that then it would most certainly be the arab states, china and some parts of india which dominate. Another 500 years would be the romans, han and mauryans.)
You get the point, the US dominates because they focused on the period of time where the US was at the cutting edge of technology. (they still are, most of the worlds breakthroughs are happening either in the US or Europe due to their large research institutions. China is catching up aswell, but as of right now that's all they're doing. Catching up.)
@@shaaravguha3760 wtf are you on? Please tell me you don't actually belive that?
Tell me who invented the
working electric refrigerator
wifi
latex gloves
goggle maps
CPAP machines
pacemakers
iron lung ventilator
cochlear ear
black box flight recorders
spray on skin
medical ultrasound
duel flush toilets
polymer money
gene silencing
antiviral/flu meds
radar system to detect stealth aircraft
EXELGRAM (anti-counterfeiting tech)
blast glass
cervical cancer vacinne
quantum bit
quantum logic gate
ATM machines
Frazer lens (allows near & far objects to be simultaniously in focus in films)
digital product activation
multi-focal contact lenses
Polilight forensic lamp (used to detect fingerprints at crime scenes & analyse paintings to see additional paintings under them & erased paint of writing)
baby safety capsule for cars
airplane emergency escape slide
frozen embryo baby
hovering rocket
microwave landing system (what all planes/airports use to land planes when visibility is poor)
wine cask
plastic glasses lenses
braces for teeth
solar hot water systems
sunscreen
granny smith apple
secret ballot voting
ghost bat military figher jet/drone combo
mass producable cardboard stealth attack drone (in use in Ukraine)
got it yet? That's only a part list of course, but that entire list is from a single country that didn't get a SINGLE mention in this video. Do you honestly think not a single one of those inventions was more worthy of the list than the bandaid?
Figured out what country that list is from yet? Here's an extra tip, they also invented the winged keel for sailing boats & used it in a certain yatch race the US had won eternally until that invention.
I could list off a tonne more inventions from the same country or from other countries also not mentioned in this video. Tell me you honestly think the US is inventing more than the above in terms of revolutionary, life changing inventions in global use today & note that the population of the country that invented all the above is 13 times less than that of the US, with only 27 million people & only coming into existance in 1901
Lets see you come up with a list that long for US inventions of equal importance to the world as those above! Not possible, is it! The US is good at selling itself, NOT inventing stuff! It lags WAY below the world in the number of inovations!
Stopped watching half way through, so many mistakes, Alexander Graham Bell was Scottish for example.
YOu mean british
@@lawomega1 No I don't, I mean Scottish, he was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, that makes him Scottish first and British second.
The pedal bicycle was also invented by a Scot. The invention Germany gave was the Swiftwalker, which needed the rider to propel the bike using their feet on the ground.
{ stopped watching when Michael Faraday called from the U.S. rubbish video
Just scottish
We don't have to pretend to be British - some of us in Scotland want Britain to break up
also *vaccination* was invented by the UK but *vaccines* by Mr. Pasteur, in France
That depends on what vaccine you're talking about. There are many vaccines developed in many different countries
@@glen3679 And the principle of vaccination came from China.
I think it’s hard to say anyone really invented them, maybe they refined the process and showed scientifically their effectiveness but all over the world poor people had been vaccinating themselves against cow pox etc for generations in farming communities.
Why was it called vaccination then? The smallpox vaccine was invented in 1796 by English physician Edward Jenner. It was the first of the vaccines. He was the first to publish evidence that it was effective and to provide advice on its production.
@@sandgrownun66 Because he used the knowledge of the farm workers. They got cowpox, which gave them immunity to smallpox. Vacca is the latin for cow. Jenner vaccinated James Phipps, an 8 year-old, with cowpox. Once his fever had gone, Jenner started injecting him with smallpox material. He didnt get it. It was done again, after some time, and still no infection was caused.
Americans: we created the airplanes
Brazillians: are you sure?
Kiwis: Richard Pearse would say otherwise.
As others have said lots of errors in this, and as you said Ryan very difficult to assign many of these inventions, particularly since the late 1800’s, to one person. A critical thing is who got the patent in first. Edison was notoriously good at this, e.g the lightbulb, but to his credit he was a greater improver of other people’s inventions.
Alexander Graham Bell (born Scottish) was working on the telephone with many others, he applied for a patent for something that he knew didn’t work hoping he could get it to work. He did. He seemed to have a close relationship with the Patent Office which helped. His wife was deaf, so he bizarrely “invented” something which was totally useless to her. He wondered why she never answered the phone.
The biggest horrendous error in this was to call Micheal Faraday an American. To us Scientists and Engineers (in the U.K. but I believe worldwide) , Micheal Faraday is a hero. He didn’t just invent the electric motor but established the fundamental principles of electromagnetism on which the modern world is founded. He is up there with Newton, Darwin and Einstein. I don’t believe he ever left the U.K, let alone become American.
adding on that: Femi was Italian so nuclear reactors are not really a US invention (although Fermi was working in US). Internet hasn't been invented in the US as well but at the CERN (by a Belgian if I remember correctly)
Didn’t Thomas Edison steal most of‘his’ ideas from Nikola Tesla??
@@tamibenz6626Now that is an interesting question. I don’t think Edison really stole anything from Tesla, but Tesla worked for Edison and they had a fundamental breakup over electricity. Edison thought the future was DC and Tesla was for AC, so Tesla went to Westinghouse to promote AC, and the past 100 years has proven Tesla right. Westinghouse didn’t appreciate him either and he died in a hotel room in poverty. I should be pleased that Elon Musk has resurrected his name, but I just don’t like Elon Musk. There is a movie about Tesla but can’t remember the name. I think it was on Netflix.
@@Ali-ew3oe Actually the internet was invented by the american DARPA, what CERN invented was the world-wide-web (www) which is build as part (or maybe on top of) the internet.
@@torstensteinert776The World Wide Web was invented by Tim Berners-Lee; an Englishman.
99% of those "US" inventors are from Europe 😂
people who were born in america have american nationality making them american genius
@@Usabby1776So if a cat is born in a doghouse, it’s suddenly a dog?
Edit: Before you come to argue back with “the two aren’t the same species so it doesn’t count”, feel free to switch up “cat” to husky and “dog” to german shepherd, as the species (lupus familiaris) is the same. My point remains.
99% of those foundations of knowledge, labour, finances, other resources called European are from Asia & Africa.
@@Usabby1776 how is Michael Faraday American please? Or Graham Bell?
@@theseeker3073 nope they’re still American 😂😂😂
The first telephone was demonstrated by Johann Philipp Reis, in Germany - on 26 October 1861. Bell's patent was issued in March 1876.
Who did he call ?
Or Antonio meucci 🇮🇹
Helicopter is azboth Oscar and Igor Sikorsky 🇺🇦
@@KygoCalvinHarris-xu4kv there is audio evidence of Alexander Graham Bells phone call - sure its in a museum in Nova Scotia I believe
@@johnmaclagan2263 yeah but Germany and Italy may have their own too
14:18 = Alan Turing invented the Turing machine in England during World War II. With this calculating machine he was able to crack the German encryption machine Enigma, which shortened the war by years
The original video I think was not very good because it did not mention the printing press. The printing press, invented by German goldsmith Johannes Gutenberg in the year 1436, is arguable one of the most important inventions. It's right up there with the steam engine and the internet in terms of the revolutionary ripple effects it caused. It facilitated the mass-production of books and mass-spread of knowledge, and caused an information revolution. I'm not even German yet I feel frustrated lmao
The Gutenberg Press
printing was invented in China centuries earlier, though Gutenberg's version is more well known in the west cause it created a revolution.
@@MrEversNo. It was different.
Gutenberg's version had interchangable letters whereras the early European and Chinese printing press only could copy a set of pre-made scripts.
@@BlueFlash215The QWERTY layout was devised and created in the early 1870s by Christopher Latham Sholes
@@PortugalZeroworldcup that's a completely different thing that has absolutely nothing to do with the printing press
for the telephone Antonio Meucci an Italian had created the prototype , this is a translated article : The invention of the telephone was at the center of a long controversy between the Italian Antonio Meucci and the American Alexander Graham Bell. In 1834 Meucci began working on this project in Florence, and then perfected it in Cuba, where he arrived as a political refugee. Meucci built several prototype telephones that he submitted to the American company Western Union Telegraph Company asking for funding. The company not only gave him a negative response, but also told him that it had lost its prototypes. In 1876, however, a former Western Union employee, Alexander Graham Bell, who had examined Meucci's devices, patented the telephone! Only in 2002 did the United States Congress officially recognize, albeit very belatedly, that Meucci was the inventor of the telephone.
Alexandre Graham Bell wasn't american he was scottish born in Edinburgh
Johann Philipp Reis invented the telephone 10 years before Alexander Graham Bell!
And i'm pretty sure that Enrico Fermi was from Italy, not from the USA.
Alexander Graham Bell that Scottish inventor who first demonstrated it to Queen Victoria in her house on the Isle of Wight... that "American"???
Too me the inventor of the telephone will always be Philipp Reis. He even called his invention "Telephon"
Volt (the unit) is named after Volta, just as the Ampere is named after Ampere, the Coulumb after Coulumb and the Watt after Watt (and the Newton after Newton)
The history of artificial refrigeration dates back to the 18th century. Scottish professor William Cullen designed a small refrigerating machine in 1755
1:48 Before pendulum clocks existed, people had to use things like sun dials, water clocks, candles, hourglasses and so on to measure time.
Spring-driven clocks already existed, but they were really inaccurate before Huygens incorporated the pendulum, which provided a massive increase in precision.
To help you understand the importance of this, consider being a businessman who is trying to schedule half a dozen meetings in an afternoon. Having a good clock means your grasp on time moves from using generic terms like "dawn", "noon" and "dusk" to something like "01:48 PM" - this makes everything much more efficient.
The way I look at a pendulum, is like using a Metronome when I'm playing music. It keeps me in time. The pendulum does the same thing, but for the clocks hands.
@@adrianboardman162 Yeah, you're right. It's the same thing.
Fun fact about Huygens: when he was a child, he received a liberal education which included studying music. So it's possible that he followed the same thought process as you.
The pendulum accuracy also permit lots and lots of progress in science and shipping navigation (The time of the day is crucial in the position calcul with sun or stars). In those domains accuracy is crucial.
@@JoachimTHIBAULT Pendulum clocks don't work well on ships, though. The first really precise maritime watches made by John Harrison were spring-powered and used balance wheels.
@@BrokenCurtain I'm Autistic, so I'm probably thinking a bit too outside the box, But it does make sense that a metronome set to 120 (2 beats, or Tick Tocks) a minute would equals 60 seconds, or a minute. I'd need to properly look into it.
Bro hitting us with his annual quota US propaganda
Hahaha. Agree
4:22 "Alessandro Volta - cool name for a battery inventor" is in itself the most American comment possible. 😂 (I really hope you meanwhile realised that the physical unit is named after the inventor to honour his invention.)
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
😂😂
i paused the video and went on a whole exasperated tangent to myself about it 😭😭😭
Are you deaf? That's exactly what he said immediately after.
@@peterwilkins7013 He asked a question, to be precise. And irrespective of this my comment is still true. 😊
so, for Brazil the inventor of the airplane is Santos Dummont with his 14-Bis. His plane lifted off the ground by itself without the need of an external propeller like the machine manufactured by the Wright brothers.
The person who created this video must have come up with many of these inventors nationalities off the top of his head with no actual research as he changed some nationalities to American when almost everyone knows that they were not
Very clear the creator is american, notice how a majority of the inaccuracies make the USA look alot better.
this guy didnt do reseach at all lol. Telescope is a UK invention? yeah no fat change. it was created in the Netherlands by Hans Lippershey in 1608. The Microscope was also invented in the netherlands by Dutch Father-Son team, Hans and Zaccharias Jansen in 1590s.
DNA identification is called genetic fingerprinting. It doesn't have anything to do with physical fingerprints.
Exactly. The use of fingerprints is almost a century old.
Oh now it does give a sence. Still don't understand why isn't it called simply DNA analysis well English is crazy😅
@@marekvojta9648 They used it to explain what DNA and genetic material was back when it was a very new science that most people didn't understand yet: It identifies an individual the same way fingerprints do. It was the easiest way to explain to a jury how reliable DNA was as evidence in criminal cases where the defendant had used gloves to avoid leaving fingerprints. It was easy to understand, so the word "fingerprint" stuck.
shsh, English speaking people geting confused easy...
@@Arltratlo Well I'm having English as my second language that's why it confused me. We call it literally DNA analysis (well we also know that Europe is not in middle of Earth and apart form Americans😉😀so that's probably why we use more descriptive name)
John Logie Baird (13 August 1888 - 14 June 1946) was a Scottish inventor, electrical engineer, and innovator who demonstrated the world's first live working television system on 26 January 1926.He went on to invent the first publicly demonstrated colour television system and the first viable purely electronic colour television picture tube.
Here are seven revolutionary inventions for which Tesla was not given due credit.
Electricity (AC)
The Electric Motor. ...
The Transistor. ...
Neon Signs. ...
Radio. ...
Radar. ...
X-Rays.
na Farraday was definitely the lecky motor
No, Tesla was awesome but wasn't responsible for most of the things you mentioned here. You need to look into these things for yourself instead of blindly repeating things you hear.
One example is radio, Tesla had the first public demonstration in 1893. Maybe you should research. Even workers in one of the first transatlantic radio stations in Iceland, which I visited 5 years ago, are saying that Tesla should get credit for that invention.
A point to note: The device that produces microwaves inside a microwave oven - the cavity magnetron is a British invention, without this we wouldn't have the oven. It was invented and intended for use in high power radars. A prototype was loaned to the US for experimentation and during these experiments a candy bar melted in the pocket of a scientist, this gave him the idea for the oven. A world-changing invention that wasn't mentioned was the escape wheel clock. Unlike pendulum clocks, these are not affected by movement, this allowed accurate time keeping aboard ships and made accurate longitude plotting and hence precise sea navigation possible. By knowing exactly what time it was at Greenwich (GMT) and checking for local high noon with a a sextant, you knew how many degrees West or East you were.
Cool, I didn't even think about that, but of course it'd make a huge difference to have an accurate clock on ship. Thx
Magnetron is a Scottish invention.
@@jimmyb640 Scotland is both inside Great Britain and part of the United Kingdom. What is your point? (apart from the fact that it was invented in Birmingham, England, United Kingdom).
I'm shocked how anyone ever thought that someone as consequential as Michael Faraday was anything but English. You learn about Faraday in late primary school and onwards. I don't think he even ever left England let alone travelling to America.
He traveled to France with Davy ,
And John Loggy Baird who invented the telephone was Scottish, not American. Someone need to do their homework. Humphry Davy invented the first electric lightbulb in the UK in 1802
Johann Philip Reiss, a German invented the precursor of the telephone.
@@timetraveler43him and Graham bell and Antonio meucci
TV is both Philo Farnsworth and John l Baird
Bulb Edison and Joseph Wilson swan
Aaaaahh noooò! James Harrison invented the first patented refrigeration "system". An Aussie ,1858 if a remember correctly
The Wright brothers didn't "invent" aircraft. There was competition in several countries for people to produce a powered aircraft. The Wright brothers's design was the most successful as it stayed in the air for roughly the same distance as the wingspan of a modern jet.
Well actually Gustav Weißkopf was earlier and flew over a higher distance several articles in newspapers document this his flight wasn´t filmed but stated.
USA - A country where :
One in five cannot locate the US on a world map.
One in seven think Chocolate milk comes from brown cows.
One in twelve think they can beat a Grizzly Bear in a bare handed fight. LMFAO.
I think you need to find a better video to watch....Edison didn't invent the light bulb, the French invented cinema, a Scot invented the phone, and a Brit invented the electric motor. Very badly researched.
Hear hear.
Alexander Graham Bell was Scottish. However most of his work on the telephone was actually in Canada.
The lightbulb was invented by Swan in Newcastle, UK. Fair to say Edison made it commercially viable.
Regarding AC, its one of the most environmentally damaging inventions. Not only in its electrical consumption but also its direct impact on global warming.
Arguably, the first mechanical computer was invented by Babbage in the UK in the 1820s.
Henry Woodward was a Canadian med student who invented the lightbulb based on Swan's work and others. He was too poor to see it through himself. He patented his lightbulb in Canada in 1874, and later in the US in 1876. When the US patent was filed, Edison was told about it. Edison and five colleagues spent the next 2 years trying to invent a lightbulb to beat Woodward to market. They couldn't figure it out so in 1878 Edison went to Woodward and bought the exclusive rights to Woodward's US patent, promising that Woodward would get the credit and make enough money to sell his lightbulb in Canada and Europe. Edison then took the patent and studied Woodward's design, and also made several small changes which Woodward mentioned he wanted to make. Edison took the new design and filed a patent in 1879. The US Patent Office decided there were just enough changes that it qualified as a separate invention. Edison manufactured and sold his (stolen) design, allowing him to keep all the credit and money for himself.
Inventions never happen in a vacuum, but as a person who knows a thing or 2 about computer science, I would still say, that Konrad Zuse invented the computer because his computer works pretty much exactly the same way modern computers today do, something the previous inventions just didn't.
Bell didn't invent the telephone, but an Italian.
@@UA-cam_Stole_My_Handle_TooMeucci did
The same goes to the airplane before the Wright brothers one brazilian man already did the same thing!!!
The first light bulb wss not by Edison but invented by Joseph Swan an English inventor who also installed the first domestic lighting systems in the World- to quote from Wikipedia:
"His house, Underhill, Low Fell, Gateshead, was the world's first to have working light bulbs installed. The Lit & Phil Library in Westgate Road, Newcastle, was the first public room lit by electric light during a lecture by Swan on 20 October 1880. In 1881 he founded his own company, The Swan Electric Light Company, and started commercial production."
first lightbulb was a german invention also the telephone... there are so many wrong things in this video...
In reality Edison was a fake and contributed next to nothing. He merely worked in a patent office and stole others ideas, hiding the original patent firms and claiming he invented them.
Made in usa
Willis carrier- air cooling 1902
Sergei brin, Larry page - Google 1998
Norman woodland - barcode
Ray Tomlinson - email
Thomas Jefferson - swiveling chair
Adolf Rickenbacker - electric guitar
Roger Easton - gps
Benjamin Franklin - bifocals,lightning rod
Dankmar Adler, Louis Sullivan - skyscrapers
Christopher scholes - qwerty keyboard
🇺🇸
@@KygoCalvinHarris-xu4kv Tim Berners-Lee (UK; CERN) HTTP + WWW Foundation (No WWW = no Google);
Lewis Essen, Jack Perry (NPL UK) - cesium Atomic clock (no Atomic clock = no GPS);
Michael Faraday (UK)- electromagnetic coil = pickup = electric guitar;
The tower of Nevyansk had a lightning rod in 1745 and Prokop Diviš built one on Monrovia in 1754 (Franklin invented it for the US);
QWERTY keyboard is not useful on modern keyboards, only on mechanical typewriters to prevent mechanical key interlock, Alphabetic keyboards are of more use now, but in early computing it was thought that they would be used by trained typists forever so we're stuck with them;
Eugene Emanuel Viollet-le-Duc Suggested the first Skyscraper type building; in his lectures in the early 19th C;
UK experimental engineers Gordon, Faraday and Henry - early electric motor later developed elsewhere - (no motors = no Aircon);
Swivel chair -Wow.
John Shepherd-Barron - 1967 invented and installed first ATM at Barclays Bank, London (copied by US engineer Don Wetzel in 1968).
Every inventor stands on the shoulders of earlier pioneers back to the Stone Age.
Edison invented next to nothing worth mentioning, any of 'his' big ones we're stolen or the patent was bought. He was a nasty wee shit Edison.
Maybe USA should use another invention not theirs called education
As a university professor, I was giving a course in East Africa on wildlife ecology for a class consisting of half Eastern African and half European students. During a break, I overheard a heated argument about who invented the most important stuff first. Suddenly a calm Tanzanian said, well we invented the use of fire for cooking and heating... And the discussion stopped. The Africans won!
Lol
Actually the first evidence of human fire usage is from Israel, not Africa
@@alexwtf80 lol- We know Neanderthals used fire to cook their food. I mean it's kinda dumb to even claim something like that anyway, I doubt we really know who really was the first to cook food as we're taking tens of thousands of years ago and archeologists aren't gong to find every fire pit with food left behind. We only can get a rough idea where/when some people were doing it.
@fredmidtgaard5487
It's very unlikely that fire and cooking got "invented" in this part of Africa. I would even rule this out.
Anyway, there are tons of misconceptions and false narratives in terms of history and who invented what. For instance, neither the compass, nor paper or gun powder were invented in China. This is illusional. Until the Manchu intruded in China in the 17th century (coming from Tibet), bringing along civilisation, China was presumbly in a Stone Age condition before that, or maybe on a early, primitive agriculture level.
@@alexwtf80 I assume it was already used to burn city to the grounds
it is clear that this video was made in the US and they got a lot wrong besides they left out very important inventions that were not invented in the US. in the Netherlands were more than 2 inventions as mentioned in this list, for example the fire hose, the microscope, the telescope, the audiotape, videotape, cd, blueray , wifi and bluetooth, the submarine, the Stock Exchange, the artificial heart and many more
Not audiotape or video tape, but the compact cassette. And the CD. And as far as I am aware not the artificial heart, but the artificial kidney!
all 3 vyou say its not but they are philips invented the audiotape and the videotape and than the cd and the artificial heart was infented by willwem kolff who also invented the artificial kidney@@rmyikzelf5604
1. The Stock Exchange was invented by the Italians in medieval time, under the Medici family, that also inventing the Banking system.
2. The CD was invented by James Russel. An American.
3. The telescope was invented by an Italian Galileo Galilei, that showed publicly his first telescope prototype in Venice in 1603.
4. The first artificial heart was invented by a Russian, Vladimir Demichov in 1937.
@@solinvictus1234 WIFI was invented and patented by the CSIRO in AUSTRALIA,
Wifi, I think you will find, is an Australian C.S.I.R.O invention. As is the refrigerator.
The word "paper" is derived from the Greek, "papyrus". Papyrus is a plant, common along waterways and was used by Egyptians as early as the 4th millennium BCE to write upon.
I guess it's not about having some flat, plant-based sheet to write on, but the particular manufacturing process: Unlike papyrus (and similar things from different fibers that existed in Asia), paper wasn't woven, but it was made from pulp - which allowed for easier and cheaper production of it.
Papyrus rolls were too costly, difficult to manufacture and fragile to become widely used. Paper instead was the reason people learned to write and read and knowledge become progressively accessible to common people.
@@drsnova7313dude egyptians got chinese nuts handed over to them😂😂😂 😂 paper was never invented by chinese and nobody whose history dates back to 2000years or more don't recognise it... paper was not invented by them it's just that their process was different...😂😂😂
Also while paper made from rags, mullberry and other materials may have been invented in what is today China, modern paper made from wood pulp is a complete different technology and was invented in Europe during a long process step by step by French, British and Germans.
The video he's watching is full of errors. And he can't figure out, as a poor american 😭
I know it's probably been stated below but James Watt (from my home town, Greenock Scotland) is recognized as making the steam engine more efficient and Alexander Graham Bell was Scottish. John Logie Beard (Scottish) is also recognised as the inventor of TV. Fleming (Scottish) discovered Penicillin. As Winston Churchill said "Of all the small nations of this earth, perhaps only the ancient Greeks surpass the Scots in their contribution to mankind"
I think we know that Fleming didn't really discover penecillin it just happened in his lab, it wasn't even his sandwich
The excessive use of AC in North America is astounding. When in motels in both Canada and the US (from the UK) we were kept awake by the AC in adjacent rooms thrumming all night when it absolutely was not needed. It was neither too hot or too cold. I think it is a case of habitual use.
The original Air conditioning was invented in Greece 3,200BC.
@@gerardflynn7382 A cooling fan is not the same an AC, since it lacks the concept of a heat-pump.
I lived in San Diego and every
Summer I had to take a wool sweater with me to wear on the Trolley or in a supermarket.
At the movies the chill, .loud
sound track and buckets of pop corn took some getting used to (in Raiders the darts
coming at you were very cool)
On a lighter mood, girls come
to bed with cold feet all over
the world.
Alfred Nobel developed dynamite as a safer way of transporting nitro glycerine. Nitro was quite unstable and often didn't get delivered successfully because it exploded en route. Nobel soaked clay in nitro thereby stabilising it for transport.
Sorry but 3 of the inventions claimed by the US are wrong. Michael Faraday inventor of the electric motor was English. Alexander Graham Bell inventor of the telephone was Scottish. There were several light bulbs before Edison made a successful commercial light bulb
Not to mention that Edison stole some of the inventions of other inventors.
The thelephone is Italian, Marcucci. Only in American is Bell😂😂😂😂
@@amerigovespucci4807 Interesting, I have just read up on Meucci Thanks for that.
@@amerigovespucci4807 Magari Marconi... hai mischiato Marconi con Vespucci ed è venuto fuori un Marcucci 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Alexander Graham Bell came up with the telephone in Canada, only developing it in Boston.
He was born in Scotland, and passed away in Nova Scotia, Canada.
Technically, it should say that the telephone was invented both in Canada and the US.
Michael Faraday, inventor of the motor, was British, not American.
Marco i was in Britain when he developed the radio, the first transmission was In Somerset, UK.
as was Alexander Graham Bell who invented the telephone, he was Scottish
My mother met Marconi when she was 4 years old
@@elunedlaine8661awesome 😁
@@williebauld1007i thought he was but wasn't 100%. Thanks buddy 👍
@@Rachel_M_ no problem mate 👌🏻
Michael Faraday {born September 22, 1791, Newington Butts, United Kingdom - died August 25, 1867, London, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland} was an English physicist and chemist. He was Sir Humphry Davy's assistant.
Flush toilet - actually first was discovered in Crete Island , Knossos Palace , around 1800 BC. Same for the floor heating of rooms
It was invented in indus valley
And it hasn't reached the Russian countryside yet, they still have to go outside in -30 degrees and sit in a wooden shed out in the yard to relieve themselves.
I think they missed what I consider to be Australia's greatest invention - the disposable latex glove. There are billions of them used everyday from hospitals to garages to kitchens etc etc.
No, I think cask wine is the best Oz invention!
@@petermoate5412 what about the black box flight recorder??
There’s 60 Australian inventions on google. Someone should put them on UA-cam. Even some surprised me, and I’m an Aussie. Check ‘em out.
It’s titled -
60 Great Australian Inventions. Here’s a few 😊
7. Inflatable Escape Slide:
9. Baby Safety Capsule:
17. Electronic Cardiac Pacemaker:
18. Spray on Skin: Professor Fiona Wood, a burns specialist at Royal Perth Hospital, along with scientist Marie stoner invented spray on skin in 1993. They were awarded the Clunies Ross Award for their contribution to medical science
44. Google Maps: In 2003 Lars and Jens Rasmussen through their Sydney company, Where 2 Technologies developed software that was acquired by Google to become Google Maps.
(And my fav, the most simple)
40. Notebook - the Paper Pad not the Computer: In 1902 J.A. Bircall, a Launceston stationer invented the humble cardboard backed, top glued notepad. Birchalls, recognised as Australia's oldest bookshop, having opened for business in November of 1844 still exists today.
😊
And the Cochlear bionic ear device!
@@davidnelson7786
And where would the world be without the notepad🤔
Created in 1902, the notepad was the doing of Launceston stationery company JA Birchall, who thought to take loose sheets of paper, cut them in half and glue them onto a cardboard backing for quick and easy notetaking. Genius.
Marconi was Italian, but he set up his radio at Bush House London on the Strand. this was where the BBC headquarters was for a hundred years.
yeah but marconi stole some of nikola tes,as patents
He also built Vatican's radio, but the real inventor was Tesla.
He made the first transatlantic message from England to Newfoundland
He discovered how Short Waves propagate.
I thought Marconi did all his radio stuff in Chelmsford?!?!🤔
“Alan Mathison Turing OBE FRS (/ˈtjʊərɪŋ/; 23 June 1912 - 7 June 1954) was an English mathematician, computer scientist, logician, cryptanalyst, philosopher and theoretical biologist.[6] Turing was highly influential in the development of theoretical computer science, providing a formalisation of the concepts of algorithm and computation with the Turing machine, which can be considered a model of a general-purpose computer.[7][8][9] He is widely considered to be the father of theoretical computer science and artificial intelligence.” More on Wikipedia.
Not to mention Tommy Flowers who built the first programmable computer at Bletchley Park
Zuse computer got an keyboard, no need to use a paper card or to rewire the computer... modern computer!
A/C in every American appartment/building: thanks guys for effing up the Planet!
no, no... it's the cows' fault.. they fart too much. 😆
@@m0t0b33 Hmmm ... It's not their farts that are methane-laden, but their burps.
Cows technically only have one stomach, but it has four distinct compartments made up of Rumen, Reticulum, Omasum and Abomasum, and they feed of hyper-high fiber grass (in an ideal world as, nowadays! ...) that they take ages to digest.
There is far too much cattle on this earth!
@@m0t0b33 No, in the USA they started to make meat in laboratories, using cell culture (actual fact). There is no cows anymore in their fields. Only burgers.
@timjohnathan If you don't want to harm animals, be a vegetarian. And before making meat in tubes, start by fighting the abusive food industry in the USA, which is one of the worst in the world. You obviously can't have your bottle and drink it at the same time, it is one or the other. This is the next step after the oversized vegetables that taste nothing, the grey salmon colored with carcinogenic chemicals, and the overall poisoned food that make people sick and fat. The USA is an overall disgusting place, and this is only one of the reasons why. Thankfully, most of the world has laws against these atrocities. Now, you can do whatever you want since such things are obviously going to be banned elsewhere, but i know for sure there is a place i would never go even if paid a million (and i am being serious, too).
@timjohnathan This crappy website deletes anything and everything. So, to sum up... yeah, it is a disgusting thing.
Volta invented the battery. So differences in "voltage" are named after him, not the other way around.
Alexander Graham Bell (telephone) was a British inventor. John Logie Baird was the Brit who invented the television. Lightbulb wasn’t invented by Edison but he patoned it.
Also Michael Faraday was British. "The electric Motor"
Yeah, there's a lot of these. Faraday was also British, and Fermi was Italian (although he became American later in life).
Paul Nipkow / Ferdinand Braun / Manfred von Ardenne invented television. All three were German.
*patented
Philipp Reis is another inventor connected to the phone, from Germany.
Humphry Davy demonstrated the first incandescent light to the Royal Institute in Great Britain, using a bank of batteries and two charcoal rods. The INVENTOR was therefore British, and yes, Edison tweaked the design and patented it.
1:46 The pendulum keeps the clock running at a constant speed. Without a pendulum mechanical clocks were wildly inaccurate. It's a vital invention because it heralded the beginning of true mechanical time-keeping which changed the world drastically.
Yes, Volta is the reason the unit of electrical energy is called the “Volt”.
And also James Watt is the reason we use “Watt” for power.
Antonio Meucci invented the telephone. Bell managed to patent it.
7:50 mistake. The telephone was invented by Antonio Meucci, an Italian, he worked in Cuba and New York, patented first the "talking telegraph" and then the "telettrofono", founded a company in America and held the patents for years, then the business stopped they went as well as he hoped, the investors were missing and he lost the patent because he lacked the 10 dollars needed to renew the patent, and only at that point, with an expired patent that Alexander Bell was able to patent his telephone, if Meucci had renewed the patent the commission he would never have granted the patent right to Bell. You can also find it written on Wikipedia. So who is the inventor of the first electrical system for carrying the voice? Tell me?
Meucci was also badly hurt
in the Staten Island ferry fire
and the setback was dramatic.
Wrong. Bell invented the phone while living in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia Canada. There is even a huge museum in Baddeck Nova Scotia. Look it up.
Generations of children in the United States were raised to revere Alexander Graham Bell as the inventor of the telephone. They learned about how his work with the deaf led to interest about the artificial transmission of sound, and how he filed the first patent for the telephone in 1876.
But while Bell may have been the first to patent the telephone, he was not the first to have invented it.
That honor goes to a little-known Italian immigrant named Antonio Meucci.
After moving from Italy to Staten Island in 1850, Meucci began to experiment with the electromagnetic transmission of sound. In 1856, he succeeded in building a functioning telephone which he described in his notes:
It consists of a vibrating diaphragm and an electrified magnet with a spiral wire that wraps around it. The vibrating diaphragm alters the current of the magnet. These alterations of current, transmitted to the other end of the wire, create analogous vibrations of the receiving diaphragm and reproduce the word. (translated)
Meucci developed over 30 different types of telephones, but began running into financial problems. Unable to secure funding for his invention, it was not until 1871 that he finally applied for protection of his idea. In one of history's most bitter lessons, his caveat omitted any mention that the variable electrical conduction in the transmission wires was to be converted to sound-- the key point of the telephone. Meucci's poor command of English may have been the prime factor in his inability to secure a patent with his poorly-written caveat. To make matters worse, the Western Union affiliate laboratory he had been working with lost the functioning models of his invention. Five years later, Alexander Graham Bell successfully filed his patent for the telephone, and has been credited with its invention ever since.
Meucci tried to challenge Bell's claim, but failed in court. He died nearly penniless and unknown to history until 2002, when the US Congress officially recognized him as the true inventor of the telephone.
Not a single mention of Australia:
Wi-Fi. In 1992 a determined Australian man by the name of John O' Sullivan and his colleagues at CSIRO group stubbled across Wi-Fi. ...
Cochlear Implants. ...
Ultrasound scanner. ...
Electric drill. ...
Google Maps. ...
Spray-on skin.
And so much more.
I was salty about that too, especially WiFi 😂
Somebody will be along soon to tell you the actress Hedy Lamarr invented Wi-Fi, but she didn't (despite being a very clever woman, some of whose work was eventually incorporated into Bluetooth).
It’s just random « inventions », full of mistakes and clearly missing some context
I don't think you can stumble across wifi. It was an adaptation of existing technology in to a protocol. It took the ideas of wired ethernet hubs and adapted them to a different media. That was mostly developed by NCR and Bell.
O'Sullivan and his team did invent Orthogonal Mutiplexing though (and has the court judgements and settlements to prove it) which comes in much more useful nowadays when trying to make wifi faster.
WiFi is invented by Cees Links and not Australia
Don’t forget that the parachute, the tank, the calculator, the bicycle, the diving suit.... were drawn for the first time by Leonardo da Vinci (Italy) at the end of the 15th century, beginning of the 16th! And the smart card by Roland Moreno (France) in 1974.
John Logie Bared credited with invention of TV, a Scottish man, so British. Michael Faraday also British.
As was Alexander Graham Bell who invented the TV
@@williebauld1007 telephone
@@williebauld1007Telephone you mean.
@@Deano-Dron81 aye! Why on earth I said tv is beyond me
Before refrigerators, we used ice boxes. They were metal lined wooden boxes with a purchased block of ice inside. Before we knew how to freeze water into blocks, we cut them from frozen lakes and stored them underground in natural caves.
in 1895, a German froze air to make it liquid!
An Australian made the first machine to create ice for refrigeration
@@ArltratloWilliam Cullen 🏴 refrigerator
Though I don't know condensation
Traffic lights were invented in London, and first installed there on 9 December 1868. Variants of that design was installed allover the USA in the first two decades of the 20th century.
The first *electric* traffic light was developed in 1921 in Salt Lake City, Utah.
that's interesting. I'm also curious, pre electricity, how on earth did they work?
@@mehere8038 my first guess would be people obviously… when the electric ones came out, they either lost their jobs or moved in a different department. Actually, they were probably policemen??
Technically the steam engine was invented in ancient Greece by Hero of Alexandria, though it was only a small tabletop device.
"Volta. Cool name for a battery inventor". That has to be the most American comment ever.
"Watt" did you say?
6:07 I challenge this fact as being wrong. I Googled it and it says it was Fred W Wolfe in 1913. Also, Australia invented the Coolgardie Safe in the late 1890's which is the premise of how a fridge works.
What you can expect with a country who things invented everything and take credits??? They don't know that in México was invented the birth control pill!!! Hoorray to Australia
Hahaha. The Wright brothers invented the catapulted glider. That thing wasn't able to take off and land by itself.
Wright brothers made the first powered flight.
@@xuser48 That wasn't an airplane
@@mephistounderwater - What?
always remember Santos Dumond
Spyker Broos from Nederlands taught Wright Broos make it 2 turn left and right...
OK, some of these are a bit wrong. Despite popular belief, the brothers wright were not necessarily the first to create an airplane. The invention is also attributed to and claimed by, Clément Ader, Gustave Whitehead, and Samuel Langley, who would have been earlier, and Santos Dumont, who invented one later, but this one could actually take off by itself.
As for the Internet in its most well known form, the world wide web, it is also claimed by France, though only as the invention of the concept, not the full on creation.
It is generally accepted that television was invented by John Logie Baird, a Scottish scientist. In Australia our TV awards( like your Emmys) are called Logies .
Michael Farady was English Born 22 September 1791 Newington Butts, Surrey, England Died 25 August 1867 (aged 75) Hampton Court, Middlesex, England. HE WAS NOT AMERICAN !
Charles Babbage 26 December 1791 - 18 October 1871) was an English polymath. A mathematician, philosopher, inventor and mechanical engineer, Babbage originated the concept of a digital programmable computer.
Babbage is considered by some to be "father of the computer". Babbage is credited with inventing the first mechanical computer, the Difference Engine, that eventually led to more complex electronic designs, though all the essential ideas of modern computers are to be found in Babbage's Analytical Engine, programmed using a principle openly borrowed from the Jacquard loom. Babbage had a broad range of interests in addition to his work on computers
Well, that video was clearly produced by an American.
8:15 The lightbulb is very contentious and was almost certainly NOT invented by Edison. Edison had one good quality, he could see when a product was ready to market. He employed hundreds of inventors and scientists and was ruthless about stealing their ideas and getting them to market when they were ready under his name - he filed all the patents so he got the credit.
One of his scientists/inventors likely invented the light bulb at roughly the same time as Joseph Swan in the UK, which is why the UK arm of Edison's company was sued by Swan's light bulb company for breaching Swan's UK patent on the light bulb. Edison lost, and tried to counter-sue in the US for Swan breaching the US patent, but they decided to pull out because if Swan could prove prior research they may have lost their American patent. So instead Swan and Edison negotiated a merger and formed the Ediswan company, which manufactured light bulbs in the UK until 1928 when it was purchased by a company that was eventually purchased by Siemens.
As a german I am thinking this video lacks a lot of really important things Germany invented. Here are a few things that were invented in Germany: The printing press. Beer. The motorcycle. The X-ray generator. The diesel engine. Aspirin.The adhesive tape. Toothpaste. The electron microscope. The helicopter. The jet engine. Nuclear fission. The airbag. The tape recording. The mp3 format. The coffe filter. The chip card. 😜
You didn't invent beer, it was invented thousands of years ago
@@lolman6759 by Sumerians who lived in Mesopotamia (modern day Iraq).
jet engine? really? who was the guy?
@@cornerro
Hans Joachim Pabst von Ohain
I confess I never heard about this guy before, but it seems he did invent it.
de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hans_Joachim_Pabst_von_Ohain
And the telephon. Reis was earlier than Bell by 13 years, he just did not patent it.
The Genetic Fingerprinting actually became an idea because of one Croatian officer that for the first time used a criminals fingerprint on a sheet of paper.
You are conflating fingerprinting with genetics. Finger printing was invented in the 1880's in the UK, and it was an Argentinian who reportedly first used it to identify a criminal. Mendel was "the father of genetics", but DNA itself was first discovered by a Swiss scientist in 1869. The general structure of human and other DNA was unconfirmed until UK scientist Rosalind Franklin deciphered the double helical structure using x-ray crystallography in 1952. Crick and Watson built on her work to establish which bases paired to form the helical chemical structure ( also in the UK) . Chromatography (invented in Italy in 1900) was first used in the UK to separate the chemical fragments of DNA with the intent of creating genetic/DNA fingerprints and a British scientist showed in1984 that each person's DNA has a discrete and identifiable set of fragments ( with exception of clones and identical siblings) which when separated using chromatography and highlighted on a chromatogram are known colloquially as the genetic fingerprint. So while the story of a Croatian using the technique to identify a criminal for the first time may or may not be true, DNA "fingerprinting" was invented in the UK but built on the science of individuals from several countries around the world.
Telephone: Innocenzo Manzetti - Italia 1865
(Bell had patented it)
Television
“Another breakthrough technology that redefined entertainment was the television. There are many inventors who can be attributed to its invention. But it was Scottish inventor John Logie Baird who successfully demonstrated the first working TV system.”
Gustave Whitehead, a German immigrant is said to have invented powered flight before the Wright brothers, and Santos Dumont from Brazil is also proposed as a pre-Wright brothers powered flight pioneer. John Logie-Baird of Scotland invented the television, and the German, Braun, perfected rocket flight.
The first system of traffic signals was installed outside the Houses of Parliament in London on 9 December 1868. In the first two decades of the 20th century, semaphore traffic signals like the one in London were in use all over the United States with each state having its own design of the device.
The development of radar was a collaborative effort, but Sir Robert Watson-Watt, a Scottish physicist, is often credited as the key figure behind its invention. In the mid-1930s, Watson-Watt developed and demonstrated a practical radar system for detecting aircraft, which played a crucial role during World War II. Other contributors to radar technology include German engineer Heinrich Hertz, who proved the existence of electromagnetic waves in the late 19th century, and various scientists and engineers in the United States, Germany, and other countries who made significant advancements in radar technology. So NOT Germany
At least 3 was false,where did you find this vid?🤦
It is an American dream and a cherished and oft-told tale that the Wright Brothers were the first to fly powered. But it was a German named Gustav Weisskopf
3:36 at this point I don't know if it's going to come up later but I'd say the weaving loom is much more important than the sewing machine personally - powered looms (often powered by water wheels) were what started the industrial revolution and the Jacquard loom of France was extremely important in this as it used holes punched in a long card roll (like a self-playing piano or fairground organ) to control the loom to make patterns in the fabric it wove.
The early industrial revolution was powered by the clothing mills of the UK, which were powered by automatic looms. They really do deserve their place in history.
And the Jacquard loom is the precursor of the computer.
Punched hole weaving cards were a model in early computing.
James Harrison, an Australian man, developed a refrigeration system in 1854 that removed ice as an essential component in keeping food and drink products cool.