Among HuffPo's top 11:
- iPod: little needs to be said, except, do you remember your life before having gigabytes of music in your pocket to listen to on demand?
- iTunes: made digital music downloads mainstream
- TiVo: the neutron bomb that hit TV. Do you remember when you had to watch TV in the order it was presented, or pop in a VHS tape to "time-shift"? How last millennium!
- Blackberrys/crackberrys/iPhones/PDAs in general: a computer on your belt or in your purse that is way more powerful than the computer you used to have on your desk, and it's a phone and it's connected to the web too!
- Kindle: still on the upswing, but do you remember where you were when Gutenberg invented the printing press? (don't worry, it was 1439). You'll tell your grandkids about seeing the first e-book. Yes, it's that big.
- USB flash drives: flash memory in general is an absolutely revolutionary tool, as it allows us to record visual images (photos, video) on tiny devices that can go anywhere and record anything (which can then be uploaded on the worldwide communications platform we call The Internet). It also allows us to carry up to 300GB of data in our back pocket and hand it (say, nuclear secrets) to anyone we want.
- HDTV: 50 years after the commercialization of TV, the next step in picture quality, opening up all sorts of possibilities, but mostly, allowing men to watch football on giant screens.
Huffpo's list is mainly "gadgets," in other words tech hardware with some nifty software inside. What about things that were either sold or used only as software, on existing hardware? No diff really, but Huffpo skipped those, so here are a few I'd add:
- Google: came out in 98-99, but it didn't gain popularity until 2000. Changed web search from a frustrating and incomplete exercise into an extension of our brains and thoughts.
- Facebook: changed online personas from sock puppets/imaginary selves to real people knitting their lives together.
- Twitter: it's the first wave of the 'real time web' where information is shared almost as soon as it is created
- Blogging/content management systems: Took the creation of web content away from computer professionals and put it in the hands of everyone.
- Wikipedia: the open documentation and organization of all the world's information
- YouTube: the first major step toward moving TV/video content onto the web. Trust me, by the end of the next decade, you won't use a satellite dish or cable or rabbit ears to get TV content. It will all come over the Internet.
- Skype: buh bye, copper phone lines. Hullo, cheap voice and video phone calls over the web.
- BitTorrent: An amazingly simple way to share huge files containing entertainment (movies, concerts) over the net. I can now download a three hour, 1GB Springsteen show in about 15 minutes. At the beginning of the decade I was trading audio tapes by mail with people. How easy will it be in another decade?
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