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Chris's avatar

>So the process for creating new inventions seems to be getting more and more efficient — opportunities are getting noticed and exploited sooner and sooner, up through 1970 at least (which is when the list of major inventions extends to).

Great piece, but this seems like a weak conclusion. We may in fact be missing far more possible inventions now than we were in the past. Human knowledge had increased exponentially, suggesting that much more is possible, and an invention that was possible in 1960 but would not be invented for 100 years is obviously not in the dataset; the present cuts off the long tail.

Vee's avatar

I would expect the safety pin to be fairly labor intensive before factory technology. their primary use (temporary clothing adjustment) would have been less useful when a significant portion of the population had seamstress skills. For a secondary use, such as holding cloth in place to make adjustments, they are less efficient to use than bobby pins, if someone knows what they are doing

This seems a specific example of the trend of things which could have been invented much earlier, not being invented because they weren't useful or economically feasible

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