• @[email protected]
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    -26 months ago

    no one had thought to do it

    Could you please give some examples of this? I’d love to know more.

    • @[email protected]
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      6 months ago

      A lot of stationary: paper clips, staples, pencils, sticky notes

      A lot of toys: yoyo, slinky, hula hoop, Play-Doh, crayons

      Packaging: cardboard box, plastic bottles, plastic bottles with the lid on the bottom, aluminum cans

      You use inventions all the time that you could probably just build from home now that you know what they are. But there’s nothing that says you/we are already aware of every simple invention. Just think about all the simple, yet revolutionary ideas no one has thought of yet…and if you can do that, you’ll be a billionaire.

      • @[email protected]
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        -16 months ago

        But games and art aren’t exactly like that. People train by copying great art, and code and games especially are iterative. It’s not like he took a super useful thing and made millions by claiming he invented it. He took a game, made a clone and added features, admitting it was a clone. Like snake and pong and brickbreaker.

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      76 months ago

      Not the person you initially asked, but a good one is Eli Whitney’s cotton gin that made separating the cotton fiber from the seeds much easier. It had traditionally been done by hand, which is very time consuming. Whitney’s invention greatly simplified the process and made cotton farming much more economically viable as an industry, ultimately leading to an extreme expansion in chattel slavery in the Southern United States and serving to solidify a planter aristocracy that would eventually seek to split with the United States in order to create its own slaveholding empire, triggering a Civil War that would decimate a large chunk of the country and kill three quarters of a million people.