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Technology
Not All Inventions Are Created Equal

Dallas Fed Chief Economist W. Michael Cox turns the technology spotlight on the microprocessor.

Top 10 Inventions and Discoveries

1. Electricity 1873 
2. Microprocessor 1971 
3. Computer 1946 
4. DNA 1953 
5. Telephone 1876 
6. Automobile 1886 
7. Internet 1991 
8. Television 1926 
9. Refrigeration 1913 
10. Airplane 1903 

From chewing gum to electricity, all inventions are an effort to raise our living standards. A few make it; most don't. But some inventions are clearly more earthshaking than others. Perhaps the best way to judge an invention's significance is by its extent of spillovers—connections to other goods and services that it either makes possible or makes cheaper to produce. View our list of Top 10 Inventions and Discoveries of modern times ranked according to spillovers generated. What shouldn't be overlooked is that four of the top 10 are relatively recent—from the past 50 years.

In our time, it's the microprocessor—the tiny "brain" of the personal computer—that's producing spillovers and spawning waves of new and improved products. These little electronic marvels make hundreds of other modern creations possible—from fax machines and automatic tellers to air traffic control systems and the dinosaurs of Jurassic Park. The microprocessor is adding "smart" features to many everyday products. Today's cars, for example, have more computing power than the lunar landing module of the Apollo 11 mission that put Americans on the moon. And even more applications are just over the horizon, as time and imagination point us to new ways to use microprocessors.

Microprocessors at Work
Navigate air traffic in our skies Chart 3-D seismic surveys used in oil exploration
Guide lasers used to cut metal, diamonds and corneas Locate a child in distress
Read zip codes and sort mail Control temperature and time in microwave ovens
Manage weather-tracking systems that span the globe Design new drugs
Create special effects in movies Fly planes
Scan prices of goods in checkout lines Mix paint
Keep inventories and records Translate languages
Track packages at carrier superhubs Coordinate traffic lights
Route phone calls worldwide Settle transactions between customers
Run copiers and fax machines in the workplace and home Monitor optical networks inside dams
Direct robots in automobile manufacturing plants Improve the functioning of our cars
Reduce static and interference in cellular transmissions Identify us by our fingerprints, iris, voice or scent
Operate automatic teller machines Teach parrots to talk
Pilot sewing machines in custom-fit blue jeans factories Connect people and information over the World Wide Web

W. Michael Cox is a senior vice president and chief economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Cox, W. Michael (1999), "Not All Inventions Are Created Equal," Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Expand Your Insight, February 1, http://www.dallasfed.org/eyi/tech/9902equal.html

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