Top ideas from 1950s that changed the world

The first diet soda, No-Cal, was introduced by the Kirsch Bottling in 1952. Its inventors Hyman and Morris Kirsch created the sugar-free soda for hospitalized diabetic patients at the Jewish Sanitarium for Chronic Disease (now known as Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center).

In 1958, Royal Crown Cola introduced the second sugar-free soda, Diet Rite.

3. Roll-on deodorant (1952)

Top ideas from 1950s that changed the world

Via

Prior to the invention of Ban Roll-On, the most common deodorant was Everdry, a aluminum chloride solution that was applied with cotton swabs. Besides being messy and taking forever to dry, Everdry also had the nice side effect of eating through clothes.

Source: Mental Floss

4. TV dinners (1953)

Top ideas from 1950s that changed the world

Via thecitrusreport.com

Swanson changed our world when they introduced the first TV dinner back in 1953. They were such a huge success that they ended up selling more than 10 million during the first year of production.

5. Color television (1953)

Top ideas from 1950s that changed the world

Via wordpress.com

Color TV was the HD TV of its time; introduced in the U.S. in 1953, it took a while to catch on (more than a decade) due high prices and lack of color broadcasts.

The first national color cast was the 1954 Tournament of Roses Parade.

6. Microwave oven (1954)

Top ideas from 1950s that changed the world

7. Automatic doors (1954)

Top ideas from 1950s that changed the world

Via

Inventors Dee Horton and Lew Hewitt created the sliding automatic door after witnessing the difficultly people had with opening swing doors in the wind.

Source: About.com

8. Velcro (1955)

Top ideas from 1950s that changed the world

Via fastcocreate.com

Without Velcro I would have never been able to rock some seriously badass sneakers — actually I might not have worn shoes for the first six years of my life.

9. Three-point seat belts

Top ideas from 1950s that changed the world

Via wired.com

Volvo introduced the first three-point belt in 1959, and made them a standard item in the Volvo 122, that same year.

10. Ultrasound (1956)

Top ideas from 1950s that changed the world

Via

Ultrasounds were first used for clinical purposes in 1956 in Glasgow. But, it wouldn't become common until the 1970s, when hospitals in Britain and the U.S. adopted the machines.

Source: Live Science

11. Bubble Wrap (1957)

Top ideas from 1950s that changed the world

Via greenphillyblog.com

Could you imagine living in a world without the pleasure of popping bubble wrap? I couldn’t live in that world.

It was actually created by accident; its inventors, Alfred Fielding and Marc Chavannes, were attempting to create a 3-D plastic wallpaper, not packing material.

12. Birth control pill (1957)

Top ideas from 1950s that changed the world

Via colorlines.com

Although the Pill is associated with the sexual revolution of the 1960s, it was actually created in the ‘50s.

The FDA approved the Pill in 1957, but only for cases of severe menstrual disorders and not as a contraceptive. Large numbers of women all of a sudden developed severe menstrual disorders.

What are 5 important discoveries or inventions from the 1950s?

Featured inventions include: the transistor radio, Sputnik, the flight data recorder, the Breath-a-Lyzer, and the hovercraft.

What was the most important development from the 1950s?

During the 1950s, technological innovations resulted in the rapid improvement of mass communication. By the end of the decade, television had replaced radio, newspapers, and magazines as the primary source of entertainment and information for most Americans.

What invention changed life in the 1950s and how did it do this?

The invention of the automatic washing machine revolutionized how laundry was done. The well-off housewife only had to put laundry and a detergent into the machine, and the machine took care of the rest in just two hours.

What things were invented in 1953?

Three technological revolutions dawned in 1953: thermonuclear weapons, stored-program computers, and the elucidation of how life stores its own instructions as strings of DNA.