Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Steve Wozniak Honors Innovative Inventors 82

DigitalDame2 writes "Steve Wozniak, co-inventor of the Apple personal computer (along with Steve Jobs), hosted the first annual Modern Marvels Invent Now Challenge. Wozniak's favorite invention is one that shows where to clip your dog's claws without injuring the dog. The Strawjet, a creation that weaves straw left over from a harvest into building materials, won the grand prize."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Steve Wozniak Honors Innovative Inventors

Comments Filter:
  • Re:Inventions (Score:3, Insightful)

    by gfody ( 514448 ) on Thursday May 25, 2006 @07:36PM (#15406109)
    Credit usually goes to the person who wants it the most. That tends to be someone other than the person who deserves it.

    I think it's related to that phenomenon where the more smart someone thinks they are the less smart they actually are.
  • Re:The real hero (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 25, 2006 @08:33PM (#15406347)
    Bill Gates stole Windows from the Lisa.

    And Lisa got inseminated by Steve, who stole it from Xerox. [imdb.com] Since Lisa was Steve's daughter, does all of this make Steve a sick perv?

    -- Please mod me down since I'm not nice to Steve, everyone's hero --
  • Nice title. (Score:2, Insightful)

    by ArCh3r ( 688116 ) on Thursday May 25, 2006 @08:40PM (#15406378)
    Innovative Inventors? That's repetitively redundant.
  • by peterforprophet ( 644010 ) on Friday May 26, 2006 @04:42AM (#15408200)
    Thanks, Woz. As usual, you rock.
    I loved the Inventors Hall of Fame (History Channel?) exhibit at the Museum of Science in Boston. Do you think that Quad Zipper will be a hit? Jacket = Parachute 4 Sky Dive.

    As crazy as American Inventor made inventive people look, it also showed the classic examples of the traps inventors can fall into, and that an idea takes good execution to become a reality. Doug Hall did that in sometimes startling (some might say rude) fashion, but I think showed the harsh business side of how critical one must be to avoid the pitfalls of merely falling in love with an idea -to the detriment of developing their invention more successfully- and failing that, move on. You'll have more ideas, and some will hit, some won't. Some will be before their time, and others might be copied. You know that better than most people in this community.

    I think many of us have a tendency to want our inventions to adapt themselves to our initial vision and be accepted by all, but the reality is that the finished product might be quite different from what we started out with. I just had to grimace when I heard stories of people spending huge sums of cash (one finalist spent $80K on a game proto) and other costly missteps (time, money, mental anguish) and misconceptions that first-time inventors have without an experienced support system, like an inventors organization, to learn from. http://www.inventne.org/ [inventne.org]

    Some inventors lost sight of the fact that the search was for a great American Inventor, but also (and especially) an invention that has Mass Market appeal to sell to "everyone in America." Well, at least a very large diverse group of people. Many of the semi-finalists were very determined to not change their designs, which they had worked on so hard and for many years, eschewing the advice of the design teams who were charged with helping them improve their inventions. But some were open to suggestions, and showed a true inventive/entrepreneurial spirit. And they had great stories of where they came from and what they wanted to do, not just for themselves, but to affect others in a positive way. It's a shame the show started out so American Freak-ish, and turned off a lot of potential serious viewers just so they could get a laugh at the inventors' expense. And some were *really* laughable. The finalists, however, showed the tenacity, ingenuity, adaptability and heart necessary to be a great American Inventor, and that to me was worth seeing.

    < /my$.02>

    <shamelessAdoration> And lest I forget, thanks for all the great work you do for education and FIRST. Maybe one day you'll be judging *my* (future) NonProfit's contests. :) </shamelessAdoration>

    Now where's that MacBook Mini? ;)

    Peace. Thanks for playing,

    Peter

And it should be the law: If you use the word `paradigm' without knowing what the dictionary says it means, you go to jail. No exceptions. -- David Jones

Working...