Not only the Diesel-engine: All combustion engines were german inventions: Gasoline-engine: Nicolaus August Otto (1832-1891) Diesel-engine: Rudolf Christian Karl Diesel (1858-1913) Rotary-engine: Felix Heinrich Wankel (1902-1988)
I'm really surprised Haber and Bosch weren't listed for their Ammonia synthesis method. Without them, there'd be no way to create enough fertilizer to feed the world today.
And Justus von Liebig, setting path for synthetic ammoniumphosphate fertilizer and Agrochemistry in general. And Otto Unverdorben with the first Anilin synthesis and later Friedlieb Ferdinand. This kickstarted the organochemical industry of coloure production. BASF is to this date the biggest chemical company world wide!
Maybe they skipped them since Haber also created chemical warfare. Not so good for the world. Sinner or a Saint, who am I to judge. Learned that from Sabaton.
@@tuijakantola6550 Nah. Did we watch two different videos? Do you have not recognized the low effort in production and research that the original author has put into the video? Usual warning signals are: IMAGE and SPOKEN TEXT do not match up. Partly the visualization was absolutely out of context. Then: what do you expect from a "10 things" video on RUclips? Scientific quality? Also, EVERY SINGLE invention mentioned in the video came not into existence in a vacuum. They where only possible because the international community was in busy correspondence and working together. It is a TEAM EFFORT[1]! And not such "national BS" like "the Germans did it!", which such "documentary formats" (I am joking!) suggest. Greetings from Germany, Tuija!:) [1] Not only international engineers and chemists were involved in the development of this method, it is also based on the work of Nikodem Caro and Adolph Frank, Birkeland-Eyde and others. Also: Something like Chlorine(etc.) isn't good or bad .... IT IS JUST THERE. People in contrast, may be good or bad in their actions.
Rockets is not fully true. Liquid driven rockets, yes. Regard 'Werner von Braun', as he is also the father of the first attempts to reach orbit and space
@@rikmoran3963 Okay but you are wrong: The computer was invented by Konrad Zuse in 1941 and named Z3. The first car ever was made by Carl Benz in 1886 (Benz Patent Motor Car). Werner von Braun invented the rockets that are liquid driven and inspired NASA to copy them. The TV was invented by the german Paul Nipkow In 1884. The first plane with a jet engine was the german Heinkel He 178 (prototype) and than the first production jet plane the also german ME 262. True, the jet engine was in fact invented by a british guy in theory but the first one that worked, was build by Hans von Ohain and thats the only thing that counts, otherwise star shit invented beaming technology -.- And btw: The Teddy Bear is also a german invention, even if the name was given by an american after he bought one in germany ;)
@@rikmoran3963 No, TV 1886 by Paul Nipkow in Berlin, also Germany got the first broadcast. the Z3 computer was build in 1941 by Konrad Zuse. And Jets and liquid driven rockets due WWII in Germany .
@@rikmoran3963 Errr - actually they are... To be more specific: Carl Benz - Car Manfred von Ardenne - 1st TV System using CRT, 1st transmission of TV pictures Konrad Zuse - 1st programmable computer Hans Joachim Pabst von Ohain - 1st operational jet engine Wernher von Braun was already clarified
the french invented the first bike in 1790. baron karl von drais tuck the design off the french and updated it the bike we know today and put his disign to paper in 1818.
I would actually vote the Bosch-Haber process (also German) to produce ammonia. This lead to a huge increase in the availability of fertilizers to grow food, accelerating the growth of the world population by a lot. Without it, we might be only 2 billion instead of 8 billion on earth by now. So very influential.
@@vast634 without the gutenberg press knowledge wouldn not have spread so fast and progress would not have happened so quickly and that is a very huge influence on all inventions coming after that.
Jet engine (Hans von Ohain, pretty much at the same time as Frank Whittle in the UK), periodic table of elements (Lothar Meyer, same time as Mendeleyv), light bulb (Heinrich Göbel), TV (Paul Nipkow), internal combustion engine (Nicolaus Otto), car (Carl Benz, though some Americans think it was Henry Ford), Haribo Gummi Bears (HAns RIegel from BOnn, that's where the name HARIBO comes from), telephone (Johann Philipp Reis), dynamo and trams (Werner von Siemens), motorcycle (Gottlieb Daimler), programmable electronic computer (Konrad Zuse), Aspirin (Felix Hoffmann), LSD (Albert Hofmann), Wankel engine (rotary engine, Felix Wankel), and many, many others. Granted, maybe gummi bears did not change the world... (though for me as a kid they did 🙂) However, grudgingly I have to admit that probably the most influental invention of the past century was made in the US, the transistor. Sure based on quantum mechanics, but it was built in the US at Bell Labs (for those of a certain age, Bell Labs will always be remembered as one of the greatest 'idea factories' of all times).
Technically it was Nicolas Joseph Cugnot who invented the first car in 1769. He combined a kind of carriage with a steam engine. Probably this was the first Automobile which propulsion wasn't based on animal or human power because earlier there was a Belgian guy named Verbiest who could have done this before but it was nothing you could sit on. It will burn in the souls of my fellow Germans but it doesn't matter. I don't understand the way of gaining national pride out of the achievements from single investors or discoverers. People who do this usually have no part in it and it doesn't make them smarter. Mostly invention doesn't came out of nowhere. Often they based on the achievements others and the new point is an improvement who make something more practical or better working. Sometimes it is a new combination of well known but in a different context. It's a kind of evolutionary process. Mostly the inventors are known as weirdos by their neighbors until their become honored for their innovation or a clever business guy makes a load of money out of them. This is double standard. Therefore kudos to all the guys out there who think outside the box and 'boldly go where no man has gone before'.
@@norrinradd2364 You are correct. It always depends a little bit on your definition of an item. Maybe I could rephrase it that the Benz Motorwagen was the first motor car with an ICE.
@@norrinradd2364 I don't agree. It's cuture that breeds many inventions. The individual genious maybe not so much but when a lot of inventions are done in a certain era, there's something right about the culture and you can celebrate that and to a certain degree be part of that. As a supporter when it's in the present or as a fan when it was in the past. When you celebrate those from the past, some might be just have live a few km's down the road, that's also a message to kids and parents around you. There is a collective angle to it.
@@norrinradd2364 Your comment doesn't make sense on several levels. Cugnot may have constructed a form of "auto-mobile", but it was nothing that would survive as a product and its utility was quite limited. He didn't invent something that would take hold and be used henceforth. And especially with the car, it's silly to suggest there was a notion of a "single inventor", given that Benz and Daimler constructed cars with combustion engines within weeks of each other. The difference being that their technology was practical and with some refinement allowed both to set up car manufacturing companies which sold cars to the end user.
"telephone (Johann Philip Reis)"... WHAT ?!? His first prototype was built in 1860, Antonio Meucci's one dates back to when ?At least 9 years before ! Then Graham Bell stole all their work...
Don't forget the sugar cubes! The wife of a German sugar manufacturer complained that the usual sugar cones were too big for use in the coffee cup. Her husband could invent something practical, she said, for example sugar cubes so small that they fit in the cup. Just one or two for each cup.
@@maxbarko8717 and? they exist in the UK. i could buy a pack of them but i dont see the point when 1kg packs of sugar are much cheaper (less than £1 per kg compared to nearly £3 per kg in cube form) i feel they're more of a resteraunt thing but even then, most just use sugar sachets.
There is other Stuff like the first Electrical Elevator build in 1880 by Siemens, Gyro compass (patented in 1904 by Hermann Anschütz-Kaempfe), Fax machine invented in 1956 by Rudolf Hell... there is so much more that you can make Books from it ^^ Especially after the War, mostly America stole so many Patents and other Stuff in 1945 and even afterwards that its unbelievable. American Sources speak from at least 750.000 stolen Patents from the Patent office in Berlin and other Offices and at least another 250.000 Patents who waited to be accepted into the Patent Register. A lot of those are still classified as Top Secret from the various Countrys around the World that they still extend the Top Secret Classification for it. The Reason i mention this is that in the Time from 1871 until 1945 Germany was the Nation that brought about the most new Innovations. There was also the first Computer in the World, build by Conrad Zuse in 1941, Night Vision Systems build in the End 1930s, first regular Television Canal created in 1935, first Helicopter who could actually fly, build by Henrich Focke in 1937 and much more.
@@chris_0018 Unfortunately you have no idea, Status 2021 Germany has the most patent registrations in Europe. If you adjust a few things, such as submit patents in other countries. Germany ranks third in terms of patents per person just behind Japan and South Korea. So u suck....
Jup, our languages are very similar! In Germany x-rays are correctly called 'Röntgen-Strahlen'. 'Strahlen' means rays, so rontgen rays. Where did that weird 'X' come from?
@@kleinshui9082 That "weird" X came from Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen himself .... as a physicist, that he was, he discovered "a new kind of radiation" (that was the title of a paper he wrote) and of cause, when a physicist discovers something he didn't know he calls it "X" (like in math). So in his article he wrote about "X-Strahlen" (or "X-Rays" in english).
@@kleinshui9082 Listen to how the guy in the video butchered the name Röntgen (like pretty much every name on the list). Maybe that’s another reason apart from the one in the last comment ;)
my mate is a Headmaster of a High End High School, their Year 11/12 Student, 16,18 and 18year olds... Do a 1 Exchange student program, they swap schools... And his first comment, that his teachers, and students say about the Americans Student? How they are taught, America Invented Everything, and Ignorant about the rest of the World.. They wouldn't get 15% in a History off the world test... But he said, the worst is? Their, Brain Blocking Ego... don't believe attitude...
Carl Benz invented the first practical modern automobile and first car put into series production, for which he got a patent in 1886. His wife Bertha took in August 1888 his Model No. 3, a motor tricycle, out for the first long-distance overland ride of an automobile (from Mannheim to Pforzheim, about 104 km). He got then in a patent dispute with Gottlieb Daimler, who together with Wilhelm Maybach had developed the first high-speed four-stroke Otto engine which could be throttled (at Deutz AG in Cologne, which he left in 1882 receiving 112,000 Gold marks as compensation for patents). 1883 he patented a new single cylinder 4-stroke engine developed by him and Maybach fueled by ligroin, an early form of gasoline using a hot-tube ignitor. Since Benz used for his gasoline motor a similar ignitor, Daimler sued him for patent infringement. But Daimler and Benz never met personally. 1885 Daimler and Maybach invented the "Reitwagen" (ride car), the first motorbike with an Otto motor. Daimler then ordered Maybach to construct a motor car (to sell more of his motors). The "Motor Quadricycle" was presented in 1889 at the Paris Exposition. Otto Lilienthal invented and piloted the first glider planes. One of his gliders was put in series production in 1894. He died in 1896 during a trial flight. (There were other pioneers at the time, but Lilienthal was the first to make systematic measures and experiments published in scientific and engineering publications. The brothers Wright used his findings for their own constructions.)
Because Zuse didn't invent the computer. He took a decisive step in improving the computer, but the computer is an invention of many earlier developers, such as Alan Turing and John von Neumann. Zuse applied for the patent several times, but never received it because he contributed decisive improvements but didn't invent anything new.
@@norrinradd2364 see like if you wanna argue like that, then why do you bring up Turing and not Charles Babbage? Sorry I wasn’t clarifying that I mean the First programmable computer… but I see the reasoning now why it could be controversial to include that in the list, because the computer sience as well as a glorified true or false printing machine already existed To talk lowly about Zuse is your failure to make, but you were right in arguing with my statement… it just truly isn’t that easy
@@nightcorelore5648 It wasn't me who said Zuse isn't the inventor of the computer, it was the the Federal Patent Office in Germany, the 'Bundespatentamt'. I didn't talk low about him. You find another inventor on way of computer development by yourself and it won't be the last one, so what's your point? Is Germany so poor on groundbreaking inventions and big brains that you have to make bad points with Zuse. Why it is so important to you that Zuse is the one and only who invented the computer, when everybody with expert knowledge is laughing about this idea?
@@norrinradd2364 no no you didn’t read I clearly clarified this time that I mean programmable computer… as an direct answer to your question it isn’t important to me, just engraved in my memory by visiting the computer museum as child, that he produced… what like 7 iterations of computers, upgrading it gradually and making it possible that we nowadays have the computers we know Don’t get me wrong a nice calculator would be enough for me too, without Zuse I wouldn’t have to argue about stupid details on a phone with a person like you
My brother knew back then the guys who made the MP3 format. He gave me once a music file that was only 4 MB big. It was one of the first 4 files ever compressed as MP3 - At leas a copy of them. I was not aware of how big this would become. - FYI - My brother is the cool guy. I am the one who missed the genius genes.
I love this type of videos! Since I'm Swiss, here are some fun/notable Swiss inventions (not discoveries): - Aluminium Foil - Celophane - Velcro - Absinthe - Swiss Army Knives (duh haha) - Full Metal Jacket bullet - Bobsleigh - The Red Cross There's many more of course but I though these were nice ones to pick. :)
When the electron microscope is mentioned in the video they only showed the real ones at the beginning. Everything after that are all optical light microscopes. More precise: All small table top microscopes where transmitted light microscopes. A normal scanning electron microscope needs a vacuum chamber and high voltage. So they are definetly bigger than the small table top ones shown in the picture. They cost hundred thousands of euros / dollars.
They also invented Jeans, Wire ropes, the CRT, Sticky tape, Asprin, Rifles barrels on guns, Anti Tank and Cruise missile, Naval Echo Sounder, Geiger Counter, Gyro Compass, the Microphone, The Bandaid, Tooth paste, Contact lens and Fanta.
No modern build without "Fischer Dübel"/ screw anchor (see more listed below) 1843 Friedrich Gottlob Keller: modern paper 1873 Löb Strauss = Levi Strauss: jeans 1876 Robert Koch und Paul Ehrlich: bacteriology, providing the basis for the development of antibiotics and epidemics control 1883 Otto von Bismarck: health insurance and casualty (his intens was not philanthropic but t gain support from the public/ philanthropic and to control them easier) 1887 Emil Berliner: vinyl disc record 1903 Reinhold Burger: thermos jug 1907 Ottomar von Mayenburg : „Chlorodont“ = toothpaste 1925 Oskar Barnack: „Leica“ 35 mm camera 1929 Adolf Rambold: tea bag + packaging mashine for tea bags 1934 Hermann Kemper: Magnetschwebebahn 1951 Rudolf Hell: „Klischograph“ = scanner 1953 Adolf Dassler (founder of Adidas): Stollenschuhe 1958 Artur Fischer (more than 2200 patents): screw anchor 1961 Schering AG: first birth control pill 1971 Mercedes-Benz: Airbag
Germany invented nearly everything ☺️ want some examples? how about the car, the motorcycle, the bicycle, the helicopter, jeans, contact lenses, nuclear fission, the record player, the tape recorder, the first reliable refrigerator, the paper scanner, the small format camera, the telephone, the TV, the thermos flask, toothpaste, the airbag, c-legs, the computer, aspirin, heroin, cocain and the christmas tree for example 😄
Jeans, not quite. At least it wasn't invented in Germany but certainly by a German immigrant. His name Levi founded the Levi Strauss company in the US.
@@samsalt4444 i think u mean Charles Babbage. but as his "Analytical Engine" was never built it's more fair to call the Zuse Z1 as the first computer imo, incl. binary system aso.
Germany also invented the computer mouse. For real. "Input devices with three buttons and a ball below" The letter went to the patent office, which rejected it: Not innovative and not a viable application. The device disappeared into the basement of the university. Later, the computer mouse was reinvented and patented by Americans. If a German makes an invention today, he either goes abroad or has as much patience as a cow.
Not quite right. The mouse was used with the Telefunken system. That system even had a graphical user interface. it is not quit proven, who really had the idea first, but 1968 Telefunken sold the first commercial working product. A short time before Engelhard presented his prototype....
That's a weird list. Half of the really big, world changing inventions aren't even on that list. How about the car, programmable computer, jet engine, tv, bicycle, pain reliever (Aspirin), just to name a few.
certainly a strange list, but your examples are ill-chosen Car ... not first, just a noteable improvment which kicked it off and overshadowed earlier inventions programmable computer ...A German was only first in "digital", mechanical and analog programmable computer came earlier from elsewhere jet engine ... not first, just a noteable improvment on multiple existing patents/inventions which kicked it off and overshadowed earlier jet engines pain reliever Aspirin aka acetylsalicylic acid ... technicly not even an invention, but a discovery as its a natural substance which already was in use as medicine for ages ... also the first described synthetic way to produce it date back to 1853 and were from a french guy Charles Frederic Gerhardt ... that was followed by decades of research from multiple chemists, with Bayer only picking it up eventually with their production methods and marketing it under the productname Aspirin As strange as the videos list may be, those examples hold up far better when it comes to being a German invention.
@@RSProduxx the same thing by attributing the invention of the first car to benz while he invented the vehicle with a gasoline engine while cugnot invented the first automobile with a steam engine in 1770, delamare-bouteville in 1894 (1 year before Benz's tricycle) filed a patent for an automobile four-wheels powered by a gas engine.
The Jeans was invented by a guy called Levi Strauss... His German name was Löb Strauss who was born near Nuremberg, who invented jeans. Known today as: Levi's Jeans. 😉
Many Americans think that the automobile was invented by Henry Ford but he came forty years later after Karl Benz from Germany invented the engine and the car and let his wife drive through Germany with a prototype
Pretty random pictures in the video. And the Bunsen burner as a invention that changed the world? I would say that something like the fridge bei Carl Linde is a bit more important.
The mathematican Leibnitz first theorized and used a binary calculus system in the 17th century, which is the foundation of modern computer technology. And the first programmable computer that used the binary system was build by Konrad Zuse in the 1930s and 40s.
Fun fact: In germany, the "X-Rays" are called "Röntgenstrahlen", which would translate to "Röntgen rays", after the the physicist discovering them (as mentioned in the video).
Not only the old printing press shown here, but also offset printing, with negatives etched into zinc plates, was invented by Alois Senefelder around 1800.
125 years ago, an earth-shattering technical idea became reality in Cologne. In 1876, Nicolaus August Otto created the world's first viable four-stroke engine. (Germany)
Yes but the principle of the four-stroke combustion engine was invented by Beau de Rochas (cf Beau de Rochas cycle) in 1862, then developed by Nikolaus Otto in 1867, then perfected by Gottlieb Daimler and Wilhelm Maybach in 1886, followed by the hot-bulb engine in 1891 and then the Diesel engine in 1893... What is the real deal ? Imagining a four-stroke combustion engine or building one.. we may disagree on that.
In my opinion there are a few weird decisions for the list, because there are also WAY more iconic Inventions, like: *1. The Car (Karl Benz)* *2. The Computer (Konrad Zuse)* *3. Nuclear fission (Otto Hahn)* *4. Relativity Theory (Albert Einstein)* *5. Dynamo (Werner vom Siemens)* *6. Fridge (Carl von Linde)* *7. Light bulb (Heinrich Göbel)* *...*
carl benz did not invent the automobile, he was the first to put a gasoline engine on an automobile. in 1770, the french Cugnot with his steam "fardier" is the inventor of the automobile
MP4/M4A is not a video format; it is a container type that can contain both video and audio. The formats for the video and audio within an MP4 container can vary. For audio AAC/Mp3, and video codecs such as MPEG, H264, H265.
As some have noted, Konrad Zuse build the first WORKING electronic computer, but his real contribution was this: Plankalkül, the first high-level programming language. It heavily influenced Cobol, Algol and Fortran, although the respective working groups never credited Zuse for this.
Interchangeable METAL letters, which allowed for mass production of letters. Previous technologies used carved wooden letters, which necessitated each letter being made individually and thus never being quite identical either. Using lead casting allowed to make ever more letters from the same mold (within limits, of course, molds don't last forever), which made it massively easier not to just print individual pages but whole books.
@@ohauss Not quite, Korea had Cast metal movable type printing by 1234 ad, and Bronze metal movable type was already in use by the Song dynasty such as with some bank notes dated to 1215. Gutenberg is still important as he kicked off printing in the west which allowed western economies to expand rapidly via paper currency and expand bureaucratic institutions. I doubt Europe could’ve ever reached the heights it did as early as it did without Gutenberg, possibly delaying its rise by decades or centuries.
Anoðer bit of information ðat I Þink goes well enouȝ wiÞ ðis one is ðat it's ultimately Gutenberg's fault that English uses ðe letter combinations th and gh. Before Gutenberg, ðese sounds were written ð/Þ (eth/thorn) and ȝ (yogh), as ðey still are in Icelandic. But ðen England imported large numbers of printing presses from Germany, which didn't have ðese letters because German didn't have ðem, so ðey had to be substituted. (For some reason an alternative way to substitute ð was with y, resulting in weird spelling as in "Ye Old Shoppe", which you can still see today. Although at some point the pronunciation in this context was changed to match the spelling.)
What grinds my gears is when countries decide it's Dizel, Deecel or something like that. It's a name, you don't change that ever! That's like advertising Voort instead of Ford or calling the fruit company how you say apple in your language. It doesn't work that way...
Why wasn't mentioned the car or the programmable computer? much more important than coffee filters or bunsen burners. Also space rockets or elevators or TV or... or...
How wrong you want pronounce the German names and City names? The guy in the video: yeeeeeeeeesssssssssssss. I thought taht the names will have an amarican accent What is noting bad but THIS? He didn’t even try to pronounce it right. Those are literally different names he say! But nice reaction have a nice day everyone.
Fun fact: Johannes Gutenberg‘s printing press was, according to the Time-Life magazine, the most important invention of the whole second millennium, since every possible way to provide knowledge or inform the people basically forever, was written, until just the radio and then tv and internet came along. He brought it to the masses and without him, humanity wouldn’t be where we are today. And no: I don’t debate whether it was Gutenberg or Bi Shang, because that’s not the point of this comment ;)
not as spectacular as many of the mentioned but something impacting daily live and population growth a lot: Justus von Liebig, a german chemist. He made many inventions in agricultural chemistry. mineral fertilizer, meat extract (reducing meat to shelf stable powder like in soup cubes) chloroform and more. With chemistry, some are not inventions but the discovery of its uses.
Some not mentioned things (inventions and discoveries): The car, nuclear fission, calculus, many basics of quantum mechanics, electro-magnetic radiation, continental drift, the theory of microorganisms, many basics of astronomy, some basics of heredity, pianos with metal frames, uncountable elements of mechanics. Keep in mind that because of the history of Germany, those include things done by ethnically non-germans who were german citizens because of german imperialism (before the obvious) (dutch, belgian, czech, slowak, polish, lithuanian, hungarian, italian and so on) and things done by members of the german culture group that would have other nationalities today (austrian, swiss)
there are more important inventions, like the first glider plane, 4 stroke engine, cars, bicicles,dynamo, motor bike, electric locomotive, glow bulb, chemical fertilizer, computer, telephone no it wasnt bell he was the first who patented it, rockets, jet planes, a lot of chemical and medical stuff and so on without german invention we would live in the stone age and we wouldnt be able to feed so much people on this planet.
Yes, they are much, much more. Just search for something for modern entertainment: printing press and followed by them the first magazine, radio, tape recorder, record player, television, antenna, walkman, remote control, computer, mp3 format, chip card ... Imagine the world without this 🤯🤯🤯
Without Gutenberg's printing press, the reformer Martin Luther found it difficult to spread his German translation of the Bible. This not only led to the founding of the Evangelical Church (Protestants), but also laid the foundation for a uniform High German language. Protestants were called these because they protested against the grievances. Later the printing press was also brought to England. Hence the expression upper case and lower case. Unfortunately, the printers incorrectly changed the spelling of the English language to somewhat resemble Dutch.
the profile cylinder lock is a german invention too the light bulb was also invented by a german, thomas edison improved it slightly and then registered the patent
Jet propulsion: The jet propulsion was developed in the 1930s by Hans v. Ohain in Germany. The first flight with the Messerschmidt ME 262 jet aircraft took place in Germany in 1941. Vertical take-off: The idea of vertical take-off was developed as early as the 1920s by German engineers such as Henrich Focke and Nicolaus Otto. Stealth technology: Stealth technology, which reduces the visibility of aircraft and other vehicles, was developed by German scientists and engineers in the 1940s and was used during World War II. Northrop's B2 bomber is based on 1933 plans by the German flying wing aircraft Horten H.I. Von den Horten Brüder. In Germany, companies like Telefunken and AEG played an important role in the development of television technology. The first TV with a picture tube was invented in 1897 by the German physicist Ferdinand Braun, which formed the basis of all TV sets after World War II. Autobahns as we know them today were developed by the German engineer Fritz Todt around 1930. Steam engine (invented by James Watt in England around 1765, but further developed in Germany) Bunsen burner (invented by Robert Wilhelm Bunsen and Peter Desaga in 1855) Sewing machine (improved by Karl Friedrich Gegauf around 1850) Electric motor (developed around 1860 by Werner von Siemens and Johann Georg Halske) Dynamo machine (invented by Werner von Siemens in 1866) Incandescent lamp (invented by Thomas Alva Edison in the USA in 1879, but also further developed in Germany by Heinrich Göbel and Friedrich von Hefner-Alteneck) Telephone (invented by Alexander Graham Bell in the USA in 1877, but further developed by Philipp Reis in Germany) Aspirin (invented by Felix Hoffmann at Bayer in 1897) Diesel engine (invented by Rudolf Diesel in 1892) Car (invented by Karl Benz in 1885) X-rays (discovered by Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen in 1895) Magnetophon (invented by Fritz Pfleumer around 1935) MP3 format (developed by the Fraunhofer Institute in 1995) Aircraft construction: Otto Lilienthal was a German engineer and aviation pioneer and undertook the first flight in 1890. In Germany, the technology was further developed, e.g. by Ferdinand Graf von Zeppelin (zeppelins), Hugo Junkers (metal fuselage construction) and Willy Messerschmitt (aircraft such as the Messerschmitt Bf 109). Rocket construction: Germany was a leader in rocket construction during World War II, particularly through Wernher von Braun and the team at the Peenemünde Rocket Development Center. After the war, von Braun worked in the United States and helped develop the Saturn V rocket that enabled the Apollo missions to the moon. Computer: The first programmable computer, the Z3, was developed in 1941 by Konrad Zuse in Germany. The first electronic calculators (ENIAC) were also developed in the USA, but by German engineers such as John von Neumann and Herman Goldstine. Internet Protocol: The Internet Protocol (TCP/IP), which forms the basis of the Internet, was developed in the United States, but the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) was originally developed by Vint Cerf and Robert E. Kahn, both of whom studied at German universities.
Space rockets: the first suborbital rocket was the V2 missile, the first rocket to fly outside atmosphere. It is the mother of all space rockets, including the giant Saturn V of the Apollo program. In ventor: Wehrner von Braun, space engineer.
So far I know Konrad Zuse has build the first funktional Digital Counting Machine -->> Computer in May 1941 the Z3. Wernher von Braun the Rocket Pioneer lead your NASA to fly to the moon has build the first funktional Rockets. Carl Linde was the builder of the first modern refrigeration machine 1873.
Personally I would have definitely added the car. Might be more world changing than the coffee filter tbh lol. Other than that maybe the modern computer. Something else to add about Gutenberg's printing press is that generally it's said that his invention started, or at least drastically sped up the Age of Enlightenment in Europe by the end of the 17th century by making books something mass-produceable and by extension something that the general public could afford instead of just aristocrats and nobility.
@@chris_0018 That idiot only changed the way cars are being manufactured but he did not invent any cars Karl Benz was the one who invented the car. Skrew those americans who believe it was ford and those who teach it. I am actually suprised that the didn't mention the car it was literally the best invention that there is.
@@IFHD350 it's actually very debatable, who invented THE CAR at all !!! First self-motoring car was from France, by Cugnot in 1770 with a steam engine. Carl Benz only invented the first car with a combustion engine.
I think the printing press had it's main relevance much earlier, in the rise of literacy and protestantism. The enligthenment was in need of the freedom of print that was the product of those two.
Another very important invention for Americans made by Germans: the world´s first Assault Rifle, the StG44 aka Mp44 In military technology we are still the best: Heckler&Koch Rifles and Handguns (Mp5, Mp7, G3, G36, G28, HK416/M27, USP, MK23 and so on) Kraus-Maffei-Wegmann LEOPARD-2 A7 MAIN BATTLE TANK Rheinmetall KF51 PANTHER MAIN BATTLE TANK Rheinmetall IFV PUMA Kraus-Maffei-Wegmann Multi-Role Combat Vehicle BOXER Rheinmetall Paratrooper and Recon mini-tank WIESEL There is even a rumor that a german electronics company managed to construct a radar system that is able to pick up stealth (B-2/F-35/F-22). Also the small compact Hunter U-Boats Type 205. And of course: *Rocket Technology* , which leads to American Soldiers bringing Wernher von Braun, Nazi-Germany´s leading rocket engineer, to the US where he had a VERY huge influence to build the biggest and most powerful machine ever created by mankind - the SATURN V space rocket.
The biggest most important invention is not even on the list although it is arguably the biggest invention ever: the Haber-Bosch-Process. In this process Nitrogen is captured into ammonia which then is used to produce artificial fertilizer. As of 2018, the Haber process produces 230 million tonnes of anhydrous ammonia per year. Nearly 50% of the nitrogen found in human tissues originated from the Haber-Bosch process. Thus, the Haber process serves as the "detonator of the population explosion", enabling the global population to increase from 1.6 billion in 1900 to 7.7 billion by November 2018. This invention had an impact which could only be compared to the invention of the wheel or the discovery of fire.
Gasoline engine, Jet engine ( Messersmith ME 262 ), rocket engine, first rocket, Wankel engine, mine steel frame technologie, ABS brake system, 16 Valve cylinder head ( Schrick system ) . freely variable car frame structure ( first MBQ platform ).airbag air bag improvement. After unsuccessful attempts by the Americans and the Japanese, the Germans perfected it ( Mercedes S-klasse ).Maglev system train ( original plan 1986 Transrapid 07 Germany ), Rotring System pencil, many construction industry inventions, Bosch decopir saw, Bosch drill hammer, SDS plus / max system……. and many many inventions
I think you should do one of these for Finland as well, we've invented alot of things here that I would say pretty much everyone in modern society use every day, but 90% have no clue where it originated. For example, the very first Internet browser with a graphical interface was a finnish invention Here's a good video listing some ruclips.net/video/upKS3uwS25Q/видео.html
And WHO made it possible to come up with that browser? And WHAT was is based on e.g. where had the idea been stolen from? An "invention" like that is nothing, cause without the premisses, it could not have been done at all. It's like with all the so called "invention" of Steve Jobs and apple - most of them were STOLEN or are based on other peoples work.
At Min. 13:45 by x-ray Generators there is an MRI at the Picture, so this thing doesn't generate any x-rays its just a Magnet :D. Get your stuff right!
There is an error in the video. The MP3 format wasn't invented by Fraunhofer, but buy guys working at the Fraunhofer Institute for Integrated Circuits.
The predecessor of the bicycle the Draisine was invented in Germany. There are some manuscripts of Leonardo da Vinci showing something similar but was never constructed in great scale to our knowledge today so it was a cheap way for poor people to get from a to b without horses or bulls to pull a wagon.
Automobile,Carl Benz 1886. Motorcycle,Gottlieb Daimler+Wilhelm Maybach 1885. Mechanical calculator,Wilhelm Schickard, 1623. Computer, Konrad Zuse,1941. TV,Paul Nibkow,1886(patented). The list is too long to fit into the commentary section.
I think the "Inventions That Changed the World" most was the Antibabypille! The inventor was Carl Djerassi, born in Austria. (1923) I´m sorry that was offtopic to your video, but here there are some famous austrian machine developers too: Victor Kaplan: Water turbine with adjustable impeller Peter Mitterhofer: Co-inventor of the typewriter Josef Ressel: Inventor of the ship's propeller Josef Madersperger: Sewing machine Hedy Lamarr: (Frequency spreading method) Ferdinand Porsche BTW this is my first posting in YB (after many years I´m registered here), I like your videos and your interest in Europe!
Car, Aspirin, Jeans, Lightning Bulb, Telephone 1859 by Reis (1875 by Bell), Periodic System of Elements, Generator, Bike, Motorbike, Airplane, Relativity Theory, Television, COMPUTER...
Missing the maybe 4 most important ones: 1. the car by Mercedes Benz; 2. the computer believe it or else by Zuse in the late 1930s already. This was called Zuse 3. 3. the TV; 4. the elevator.
Es gibt noch mehr Deutsche Erfindungen die heute den Alltag erleichtern und nicht erwähnt worden. Telefon von Philipp Reis ,die Glühbirne, Wolfram- Draht, der Computer, Otto Motor,. Auto, Motorrad, Fahrrad, TV, braunsche Röhre ( Radio), Düsenantrieb ( Jet), Rakete, Helicopter, Magnetbahn, Schallplatte, Zeppelin, Geldautomat und noch vieles mehr. Beste Grüße aus Bremerhaven 😁
Das Telephon wurde tatsächlich noch vor Reis von einem Amerikaner in New York erfunden. Aber weder er noch Reis haben ein Parent angemeldet und die bahnbrechende Nützlichkeit für die Allgemeinheit erkannt.
Johannes Gutenberg's invention, in spite of its (even for the 1400s) ridiculously simple conception, was revolutionary. "[...] a team of US journalists voted Gutenberg as the 'man of the millennium' in 1999. Similarly, in 1999 the A&E Network ranked Gutenberg the No. 1 most influential person of the second millennium on their 'Biographies of the Millennium' countdown, while Time-Life magazine picked Gutenberg's invention as the most important of the second millennium in 1997." (source: Wikipedia). Instead of writing one single book by hand within months or even years (please note: a person who owned twenty books or even more had been considered to be really wealthy by that time), you could produce books in unlimited numbers in a short length of time and at an affordable price (still expensive measured against today's standard) now and flyers (as the ancestors of newspapers) became the first real mass medium in history. Gutenberg was the first man to make knowledge and information (and of course misinformation as well 😁) generally accessible.
Not only the Diesel-engine: All combustion engines were german inventions:
Gasoline-engine: Nicolaus August Otto (1832-1891)
Diesel-engine: Rudolf Christian Karl Diesel (1858-1913)
Rotary-engine: Felix Heinrich Wankel (1902-1988)
Kugelmotor: Herbert Hüttlin (* 1st. September 1943)
@@videomailYT
Stelzer Motor: Frank Stelzer
@@ElectricEnfield hm, stimmt, von dem hab ich schonmal gehört. Aber ich hätte jetzt nicht sagen können, wie der heißt? 🤔
Den Sternmotor haben jedenfalls nen Ami und n Franzmann zusammengeschustert...
Jet engine: Frank whittle. It is one of the combustion engine types, just not one of the reciprocating ones.
I'm really surprised Haber and Bosch weren't listed for their Ammonia synthesis method. Without them, there'd be no way to create enough fertilizer to feed the world today.
And Justus von Liebig, setting path for synthetic ammoniumphosphate fertilizer and Agrochemistry in general.
And Otto Unverdorben with the first Anilin synthesis and later Friedlieb Ferdinand. This kickstarted the organochemical industry of coloure production. BASF is to this date the biggest chemical company world wide!
Formely they used shit to fertilize... I don't think there is a shortage of shit anywhere...
Maybe they skipped them since Haber also created chemical warfare. Not so good for the world. Sinner or a Saint, who am I to judge. Learned that from Sabaton.
Haber Bosch the great alliance
fed the world by ways of science
sinner or a saint
@@tuijakantola6550 Nah. Did we watch two different videos? Do you have not recognized the low effort in production and research that the original author has put into the video? Usual warning signals are: IMAGE and SPOKEN TEXT do not match up. Partly the visualization was absolutely out of context. Then: what do you expect from a "10 things" video on RUclips? Scientific quality?
Also, EVERY SINGLE invention mentioned in the video came not into existence in a vacuum. They where only possible because the international community was in busy correspondence and working together. It is a TEAM EFFORT[1]! And not such "national BS" like "the Germans did it!", which such "documentary formats" (I am joking!) suggest.
Greetings from Germany, Tuija!:)
[1] Not only international engineers and chemists were involved in the development of this method, it is also based on the work of Nikodem Caro and Adolph Frank, Birkeland-Eyde and others.
Also: Something like Chlorine(etc.) isn't good or bad .... IT IS JUST THERE. People in contrast, may be good or bad in their actions.
Just a few more that should be in this list: The car, the television, the computer, the jetengine, rockets.
Rockets is not fully true. Liquid driven rockets, yes. Regard 'Werner von Braun', as he is also the father of the first attempts to reach orbit and space
I think you need to a bit more research. Aside from one, none of the rest are inventions credited to Germans.
@@rikmoran3963 Okay but you are wrong: The computer was invented by Konrad Zuse in 1941 and named Z3. The first car ever was made by Carl Benz in 1886 (Benz Patent Motor Car). Werner von Braun invented the rockets that are liquid driven and inspired NASA to copy them. The TV was invented by the german Paul Nipkow In 1884. The first plane with a jet engine was the german Heinkel He 178 (prototype) and than the first production jet plane the also german ME 262. True, the jet engine was in fact invented by a british guy in theory but the first one that worked, was build by Hans von Ohain and thats the only thing that counts, otherwise star shit invented beaming technology -.- And btw: The Teddy Bear is also a german invention, even if the name was given by an american after he bought one in germany ;)
@@rikmoran3963 No, TV 1886 by Paul Nipkow in Berlin, also Germany got the first broadcast.
the Z3 computer was build in 1941 by Konrad Zuse.
And Jets and liquid driven rockets due WWII in Germany .
@@rikmoran3963
Errr - actually they are...
To be more specific:
Carl Benz - Car
Manfred von Ardenne - 1st TV System using CRT, 1st transmission of TV pictures
Konrad Zuse - 1st programmable computer
Hans Joachim Pabst von Ohain - 1st operational jet engine
Wernher von Braun was already clarified
Car, calculater, computer, bicycle, motorcycle, light bulb, telephone, dynamo, TV, fission, jet propulsion, aspirin, harmonica, jeans, vinyl record, glider, spark plug, toothpaste,
gummy bear, 35mm camera, teabag, currywurst, scanner, dowel, airbag, c-leg, and more an more.
Don't forget Heroin. Same company as Aspirin.
According to QI, the first computer was the Antikythera Mechanism.
The first bicycle was invented by Baron Karl von Drais in Germany 1817. Also a great invention for not always walking.🙂
Thanks for the info, in French, the very early bicycle (two wheels, no pedals) is called a draisine from the name of the inventor!
@@michelbeauloye4269 Interesting
the french invented the first bike in 1790. baron karl von drais tuck the design off the french and updated it the bike we know today and put his disign to paper in 1818.
Kirkpatrick Macmillan invented the treadle bicycle in 1839
Gutenberg's printing press was considered the most influential invention of the entire last millennium.
I would actually vote the Bosch-Haber process (also German) to produce ammonia. This lead to a huge increase in the availability of fertilizers to grow food, accelerating the growth of the world population by a lot. Without it, we might be only 2 billion instead of 8 billion on earth by now. So very influential.
@@vast634 The wordpress made it possible. To share and store knowledge with everyone who can read had a huge impact.
@@vast634 without the gutenberg press knowledge wouldn not have spread so fast and progress would not have happened so quickly and that is a very huge influence on all inventions coming after that.
Jet engine (Hans von Ohain, pretty much at the same time as Frank Whittle in the UK), periodic table of elements (Lothar Meyer, same time as Mendeleyv), light bulb (Heinrich Göbel), TV (Paul Nipkow), internal combustion engine (Nicolaus Otto), car (Carl Benz, though some Americans think it was Henry Ford), Haribo Gummi Bears (HAns RIegel from BOnn, that's where the name HARIBO comes from), telephone (Johann Philipp Reis), dynamo and trams (Werner von Siemens), motorcycle (Gottlieb Daimler), programmable electronic computer (Konrad Zuse), Aspirin (Felix Hoffmann), LSD (Albert Hofmann), Wankel engine (rotary engine, Felix Wankel), and many, many others.
Granted, maybe gummi bears did not change the world... (though for me as a kid they did 🙂)
However, grudgingly I have to admit that probably the most influental invention of the past century was made in the US, the transistor. Sure based on quantum mechanics, but it was built in the US at Bell Labs (for those of a certain age, Bell Labs will always be remembered as one of the greatest 'idea factories' of all times).
Technically it was Nicolas Joseph Cugnot who invented the first car in 1769. He combined a kind of carriage with a steam engine. Probably this was the first Automobile which propulsion wasn't based on animal or human power because earlier there was a Belgian guy named Verbiest who could have done this before but it was nothing you could sit on. It will burn in the souls of my fellow Germans but it doesn't matter. I don't understand the way of gaining national pride out of the achievements from single investors or discoverers. People who do this usually have no part in it and it doesn't make them smarter. Mostly invention doesn't came out of nowhere. Often they based on the achievements others and the new point is an improvement who make something more practical or better working. Sometimes it is a new combination of well known but in a different context. It's a kind of evolutionary process. Mostly the inventors are known as weirdos by their neighbors until their become honored for their innovation or a clever business guy makes a load of money out of them. This is double standard. Therefore kudos to all the guys out there who think outside the box and 'boldly go where no man has gone before'.
@@norrinradd2364 You are correct. It always depends a little bit on your definition of an item. Maybe I could rephrase it that the Benz Motorwagen was the first motor car with an ICE.
@@norrinradd2364 I don't agree. It's cuture that breeds many inventions. The individual genious maybe not so much but when a lot of inventions are done in a certain era, there's something right about the culture and you can celebrate that and to a certain degree be part of that. As a supporter when it's in the present or as a fan when it was in the past.
When you celebrate those from the past, some might be just have live a few km's down the road, that's also a message to kids and parents around you. There is a collective angle to it.
@@norrinradd2364
Your comment doesn't make sense on several levels.
Cugnot may have constructed a form of "auto-mobile", but it was nothing that would survive as a product and its utility was quite limited. He didn't invent something that would take hold and be used henceforth.
And especially with the car, it's silly to suggest there was a notion of a "single inventor", given that Benz and Daimler constructed cars with combustion engines within weeks of each other. The difference being that their technology was practical and with some refinement allowed both to set up car manufacturing companies which sold cars to the end user.
"telephone (Johann Philip Reis)"... WHAT ?!?
His first prototype was built in 1860, Antonio Meucci's one dates back to when ?At least 9 years before ! Then Graham Bell stole all their work...
Fun-Fact: In Germany we call x-rays "Röntgen-Strahlen"
No Englishman can pronounce that. Ö and TG !
@@jensschroder8214 The TG can't be a problem. It's the same like the TG in NetGear.
Swedish. Röntgenstråle (n) (ar)
Yes and I think it's because English-speakers have a hard time with Umlauts. Or they did not want to attribute it to a German.
"Röngten Rays" haha
Morphine was also developed in Germany, and nowadays it is impossible to imagine pain therapy without it.
...1804/05 by F.W. Sertürner ;)
Also Heroine invented by the Bayer company in 1900!
Don't forget the sugar cubes! The wife of a German sugar manufacturer complained that the usual sugar cones were too big for use in the coffee cup. Her husband could invent something practical, she said, for example sugar cubes so small that they fit in the cup. Just one or two for each cup.
Then you should also mention the Melitta coffee filter
I though it was usually considered Czech invention. Rad was originally born in Switzerland, but his factory was in West Moravia.
@@heindaddel2531 The coffee filter is actually mentioned in the video... 😆
Sugar cubes are almost unknown in USA.
@@maxbarko8717 and? they exist in the UK. i could buy a pack of them but i dont see the point when 1kg packs of sugar are much cheaper (less than £1 per kg compared to nearly £3 per kg in cube form) i feel they're more of a resteraunt thing but even then, most just use sugar sachets.
Also german invention:
1st programmable computer = "Z1" in 1938
was looking for that comment! Dr Zuse was just simply a genius!
Another German invention that led to the development of the modern PC: the Enigma machine.
Yes, but the z3 was the first working one. And it was later proven, that it even was Touring complete.
@@mijp you are confusing several things.
@@lorenzsabbaer7725 you think so? well, then name it.
" the 35mm camera" was invented in Germany by Oskar Barnack in 1925 and the company he owned is known under "Leica"
There is other Stuff like the first Electrical Elevator build in 1880 by Siemens, Gyro compass (patented in 1904 by Hermann Anschütz-Kaempfe), Fax machine invented in 1956 by Rudolf Hell... there is so much more that you can make Books from it ^^
Especially after the War, mostly America stole so many Patents and other Stuff in 1945 and even afterwards that its unbelievable. American Sources speak from at least 750.000 stolen Patents from the Patent office in Berlin and other Offices and at least another 250.000 Patents who waited to be accepted into the Patent Register. A lot of those are still classified as Top Secret from the various Countrys around the World that they still extend the Top Secret Classification for it.
The Reason i mention this is that in the Time from 1871 until 1945 Germany was the Nation that brought about the most new Innovations. There was also the first Computer in the World, build by Conrad Zuse in 1941, Night Vision Systems build in the End 1930s, first regular Television Canal created in 1935, first Helicopter who could actually fly, build by Henrich Focke in 1937 and much more.
Stole? They liberated the patents.
@@DenUitvreter I liberated ur mom....
who cares about the past. Nowadays germany really sucks in new inventions. The only invention of the last decade was the first covid vaccine.
Even that is just boggus since its totally unsafe ^^
@@chris_0018 Unfortunately you have no idea, Status 2021 Germany has the most patent registrations in Europe. If you adjust a few things, such as submit patents in other countries. Germany ranks third in terms of patents per person just behind Japan and South Korea. So u suck....
Nearly all about transportion: Draisine, bycicle, motorbike, automobile, glider, helicopter, space rocket 🤯🤯🤯
Well now I know why we in Sweden call x-ray for röntgen, it was the inventers name 👍
Jup, our languages are very similar! In Germany x-rays are correctly called 'Röntgen-Strahlen'. 'Strahlen' means rays, so rontgen rays. Where did that weird 'X' come from?
@@kleinshui9082 That "weird" X came from Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen himself .... as a physicist, that he was, he discovered "a new kind of radiation" (that was the title of a paper he wrote) and of cause, when a physicist discovers something he didn't know he calls it "X" (like in math). So in his article he wrote about "X-Strahlen" (or "X-Rays" in english).
@@kleinshui9082 Listen to how the guy in the video butchered the name Röntgen (like pretty much every name on the list). Maybe that’s another reason apart from the one in the last comment ;)
We call it rontgen in the Netherlands too..
my mate is a Headmaster of a High End High School, their Year 11/12 Student, 16,18 and 18year olds...
Do a 1 Exchange student program, they swap schools...
And his first comment, that his teachers, and students say about the Americans Student?
How they are taught, America Invented Everything, and Ignorant about the rest of the World..
They wouldn't get 15% in a History off the world test...
But he said, the worst is? Their, Brain Blocking Ego... don't believe attitude...
Carl Benz invented the first practical modern automobile and first car put into series production, for which he got a patent in 1886. His wife Bertha took in August 1888 his Model No. 3, a motor tricycle, out for the first long-distance overland ride of an automobile (from Mannheim to Pforzheim, about 104 km). He got then in a patent dispute with Gottlieb Daimler, who together with Wilhelm Maybach had developed the first high-speed four-stroke Otto engine which could be throttled (at Deutz AG in Cologne, which he left in 1882 receiving 112,000 Gold marks as compensation for patents). 1883 he patented a new single cylinder 4-stroke engine developed by him and Maybach fueled by ligroin, an early form of gasoline using a hot-tube ignitor. Since Benz used for his gasoline motor a similar ignitor, Daimler sued him for patent infringement. But Daimler and Benz never met personally. 1885 Daimler and Maybach invented the "Reitwagen" (ride car), the first motorbike with an Otto motor. Daimler then ordered Maybach to construct a motor car (to sell more of his motors). The "Motor Quadricycle" was presented in 1889 at the Paris Exposition.
Otto Lilienthal invented and piloted the first glider planes. One of his gliders was put in series production in 1894. He died in 1896 during a trial flight. (There were other pioneers at the time, but Lilienthal was the first to make systematic measures and experiments published in scientific and engineering publications. The brothers Wright used his findings for their own constructions.)
Every time I see a reaction to this video, I really wonder why the first computer isn’t part of the list
Because Zuse didn't invent the computer. He took a decisive step in improving the computer, but the computer is an invention of many earlier developers, such as Alan Turing and John von Neumann. Zuse applied for the patent several times, but never received it because he contributed decisive improvements but didn't invent anything new.
@@norrinradd2364 see like if you wanna argue like that, then why do you bring up Turing and not Charles Babbage?
Sorry I wasn’t clarifying that I mean the First programmable computer… but I see the reasoning now why it could be controversial to include that in the list, because the computer sience as well as a glorified true or false printing machine already existed
To talk lowly about Zuse is your failure to make, but you were right in arguing with my statement… it just truly isn’t that easy
@@nightcorelore5648 It wasn't me who said Zuse isn't the inventor of the computer, it was the the Federal Patent Office in Germany, the 'Bundespatentamt'. I didn't talk low about him. You find another inventor on way of computer development by yourself and it won't be the last one, so what's your point? Is Germany so poor on groundbreaking inventions and big brains that you have to make bad points with Zuse. Why it is so important to you that Zuse is the one and only who invented the computer, when everybody with expert knowledge is laughing about this idea?
@@norrinradd2364 no no you didn’t read I clearly clarified this time that I mean programmable computer… as an direct answer to your question it isn’t important to me, just engraved in my memory by visiting the computer museum as child, that he produced… what like 7 iterations of computers, upgrading it gradually and making it possible that we nowadays have the computers we know
Don’t get me wrong a nice calculator would be enough for me too, without Zuse I wouldn’t have to argue about stupid details on a phone with a person like you
First computer: the Antikythera Mechanism. Computers were originally people who calculated by hand before the mechanical computer hit the scene.
My brother knew back then the guys who made the MP3 format. He gave me once a music file that was only 4 MB big. It was one of the first 4 files ever compressed as MP3 - At leas a copy of them. I was not aware of how big this would become. - FYI - My brother is the cool guy. I am the one who missed the genius genes.
...funny..my brother knew the guys who wrote the original java script...before that, the homepages were just able to show letters.
@@nachtaktiv1 I can't believe that Guybrush Threepwood commented on me. Your adventures were awesome. I guess I am famous now.
@@nachtaktiv1 Bullshit, since I had all kinds of content long before I knew what JC was all about.
Automobile, bike, aspirin, contact lenses, helicopter, thermos, electric drill and of course...the gummy bears
Konrad Zuse - the computer
Ferdinand Braun - cathode ray tube - TV
Dont forget the moon rocket
I love this type of videos!
Since I'm Swiss, here are some fun/notable Swiss inventions (not discoveries):
- Aluminium Foil
- Celophane
- Velcro
- Absinthe
- Swiss Army Knives (duh haha)
- Full Metal Jacket bullet
- Bobsleigh
- The Red Cross
There's many more of course but I though these were nice ones to pick. :)
Toblerone! 🤗😋
The white cross as well🥴
When did starting an organisation (Red Cross) became an "invention"....????
„Swiss knife” its a Ancient Roman invention.
Sincerely thank you for Absinthe!
When the electron microscope is mentioned in the video they only showed the real ones at the beginning. Everything after that are all optical light microscopes. More precise: All small table top microscopes where transmitted light microscopes.
A normal scanning electron microscope needs a vacuum chamber and high voltage. So they are definetly bigger than the small table top ones shown in the picture. They cost hundred thousands of euros / dollars.
They also invented Jeans, Wire ropes, the CRT, Sticky tape, Asprin, Rifles barrels on guns, Anti Tank and Cruise missile, Naval Echo Sounder, Geiger Counter, Gyro Compass, the Microphone, The Bandaid, Tooth paste, Contact lens and Fanta.
No modern build without "Fischer Dübel"/ screw anchor (see more listed below)
1843 Friedrich Gottlob Keller: modern paper
1873 Löb Strauss = Levi Strauss: jeans
1876 Robert Koch und Paul Ehrlich: bacteriology, providing the basis for the development of antibiotics and epidemics control
1883 Otto von Bismarck: health insurance and casualty (his intens was not philanthropic but t gain support from the public/ philanthropic and to control them easier)
1887 Emil Berliner: vinyl disc record
1903 Reinhold Burger: thermos jug
1907 Ottomar von Mayenburg : „Chlorodont“ = toothpaste
1925 Oskar Barnack: „Leica“ 35 mm camera
1929 Adolf Rambold: tea bag + packaging mashine for tea bags
1934 Hermann Kemper: Magnetschwebebahn
1951 Rudolf Hell: „Klischograph“ = scanner
1953 Adolf Dassler (founder of Adidas): Stollenschuhe
1958 Artur Fischer (more than 2200 patents): screw anchor
1961 Schering AG: first birth control pill
1971 Mercedes-Benz: Airbag
Germany invented nearly everything ☺️
want some examples?
how about the car, the motorcycle, the bicycle, the helicopter, jeans, contact lenses, nuclear fission, the record player, the tape recorder, the first reliable refrigerator, the paper scanner, the small format camera, the telephone, the TV, the thermos flask, toothpaste, the airbag, c-legs, the computer, aspirin, heroin, cocain and the christmas tree for example 😄
Jeans, not quite. At least it wasn't invented in Germany but certainly by a German immigrant. His name Levi founded the Levi Strauss company in the US.
a german also built the first computer:)
They did not invent the plastic 😁
I thought Charles baggage built the first computer
@@samsalt4444 i think u mean Charles Babbage. but as his "Analytical Engine" was never built it's more fair to call the Zuse Z1 as the first computer imo, incl. binary system aso.
Germany also invented the computer mouse. For real.
"Input devices with three buttons and a ball below"
The letter went to the patent office, which rejected it: Not innovative and not a viable application.
The device disappeared into the basement of the university.
Later, the computer mouse was reinvented and patented by Americans.
If a German makes an invention today, he either goes abroad or has as much patience as a cow.
Not quite right. The mouse was used with the Telefunken system. That system even had a graphical user interface. it is not quit proven, who really had the idea first, but 1968 Telefunken sold the first commercial working product. A short time before Engelhard presented his prototype....
I remember these times when you had to clean the mouse ball ^^
@UnknownDev Germany made about 90% of modern technology. One of the most important ones in my opinion is arsphenamine (precursor of penicillin).
That's a weird list. Half of the really big, world changing inventions aren't even on that list. How about the car, programmable computer, jet engine, tv, bicycle, pain reliever (Aspirin), just to name a few.
certainly a strange list, but your examples are ill-chosen
Car ... not first, just a noteable improvment which kicked it off and overshadowed earlier inventions
programmable computer ...A German was only first in "digital", mechanical and analog programmable computer came earlier from elsewhere
jet engine ... not first, just a noteable improvment on multiple existing patents/inventions which kicked it off and overshadowed earlier jet engines
pain reliever Aspirin aka acetylsalicylic acid ... technicly not even an invention, but a discovery as its a natural substance which already was in use as medicine for ages ... also the first described synthetic way to produce it date back to 1853 and were from a french guy Charles Frederic Gerhardt ... that was followed by decades of research from multiple chemists, with Bayer only picking it up eventually with their production methods and marketing it under the productname Aspirin
As strange as the videos list may be, those examples hold up far better when it comes to being a German invention.
@@diedampfbrasse98 some of what you say is like saying "That one guy didn´t invent the wheel, there were people who made round rocks before him..."
@@RSProduxx the same thing by attributing the invention of the first car to benz while he invented the vehicle with a gasoline engine while cugnot invented the first automobile with a steam engine in 1770, delamare-bouteville in 1894 (1 year before Benz's tricycle) filed a patent for an automobile four-wheels powered by a gas engine.
The Jeans was invented by a guy called Levi Strauss... His German name was Löb Strauss who was born near Nuremberg, who invented jeans. Known today as: Levi's Jeans. 😉
And his "invention" was based on a much older type of pants, made of Linen, meaning, it was made of HEMP.
Thank you for sharing your video. Wikipedia will let u know about missings on the "List of German inventions and discoveries".
Many Americans think that the automobile was invented by Henry Ford but he came forty years later after Karl Benz from Germany invented the engine and the car and let his wife drive through Germany with a prototype
Pretty random pictures in the video. And the Bunsen burner as a invention that changed the world? I would say that something like the fridge bei Carl Linde is a bit more important.
without the bunsen burner alot of chemical inventions couldnt have been made.
The mathematican Leibnitz first theorized and used a binary calculus system in the 17th century, which is the foundation of modern computer technology. And the first programmable computer that used the binary system was build by Konrad Zuse in the 1930s and 40s.
Fun fact: In germany, the "X-Rays" are called "Röntgenstrahlen", which would translate to "Röntgen rays", after the the physicist discovering them (as mentioned in the video).
Not only the old printing press shown here, but also offset printing, with negatives etched into zinc plates, was invented by Alois Senefelder around 1800.
I think there are some bigger ones but these were nice too.
125 years ago, an earth-shattering technical idea became reality in Cologne. In 1876, Nicolaus August Otto created the world's first viable four-stroke engine. (Germany)
Yes but the principle of the four-stroke combustion engine was invented by Beau de Rochas (cf Beau de Rochas cycle) in 1862, then developed by Nikolaus Otto in 1867, then perfected by Gottlieb Daimler and Wilhelm Maybach in 1886, followed by the hot-bulb engine in 1891 and then the Diesel engine in 1893... What is the real deal ? Imagining a four-stroke combustion engine or building one.. we may disagree on that.
Don’t forgot the Christmas tree 🎄
It’s also an German invention not so world changing but at lest popular in the Christmas time 😅
In my opinion there are a few weird decisions for the list, because there are also WAY more iconic Inventions, like:
*1. The Car (Karl Benz)*
*2. The Computer (Konrad Zuse)*
*3. Nuclear fission (Otto Hahn)*
*4. Relativity Theory (Albert Einstein)*
*5. Dynamo (Werner vom Siemens)*
*6. Fridge (Carl von Linde)*
*7. Light bulb (Heinrich Göbel)*
*...*
carl benz did not invent the automobile, he was the first to put a gasoline engine on an automobile. in 1770, the french Cugnot with his steam "fardier" is the inventor of the automobile
3 Fissione nucleare, Enrico Fermi, Italia; 5 Dinamo, Antonio Pacinotti, Italia
MP4/M4A is not a video format; it is a container type that can contain both video and audio. The formats for the video and audio within an MP4 container can vary. For audio AAC/Mp3, and video codecs such as MPEG, H264, H265.
As some have noted, Konrad Zuse build the first WORKING electronic computer, but his real contribution was this: Plankalkül, the first high-level programming language. It heavily influenced Cobol, Algol and Fortran, although the respective working groups never credited Zuse for this.
Konrad Zuse invented the first fully PROGRAMMABLE computer.
Gutenberg did not invent the printing press, but he significally improved it by adding interchangeable letters
Interchangeable METAL letters, which allowed for mass production of letters. Previous technologies used carved wooden letters, which necessitated each letter being made individually and thus never being quite identical either. Using lead casting allowed to make ever more letters from the same mold (within limits, of course, molds don't last forever), which made it massively easier not to just print individual pages but whole books.
@@ohauss absolutely right. I just wanted to give a short answer. But the part with the lead letters really is the thing that made the difference
@@ohauss Not quite, Korea had Cast metal movable type printing by 1234 ad, and Bronze metal movable type was already in use by the Song dynasty such as with some bank notes dated to 1215.
Gutenberg is still important as he kicked off printing in the west which allowed western economies to expand rapidly via paper currency and expand bureaucratic institutions. I doubt Europe could’ve ever reached the heights it did as early as it did without Gutenberg, possibly delaying its rise by decades or centuries.
Anoðer bit of information ðat I Þink goes well enouȝ wiÞ ðis one is ðat it's ultimately Gutenberg's fault that English uses ðe letter combinations th and gh. Before Gutenberg, ðese sounds were written ð/Þ (eth/thorn) and ȝ (yogh), as ðey still are in Icelandic. But ðen England imported large numbers of printing presses from Germany, which didn't have ðese letters because German didn't have ðem, so ðey had to be substituted. (For some reason an alternative way to substitute ð was with y, resulting in weird spelling as in "Ye Old Shoppe", which you can still see today. Although at some point the pronunciation in this context was changed to match the spelling.)
@@johaquila I thought it was "Þ" that got replaced with a "Y".
He forgot the car.........Gottlieb Daimler and Carl Benz............the car is a German Invention.....🤣🤣
Das lustige ist, was mir hier noch fehlte war, dass wir den Ersten Düsenjäger erfunden haben der auch flog.😁
und Tarn Fähigkeit hatte aber auch visire für gewehre night vision und co ^^
What grinds my gears is when countries decide it's Dizel, Deecel or something like that. It's a name, you don't change that ever!
That's like advertising Voort instead of Ford or calling the fruit company how you say apple in your language. It doesn't work that way...
Like, when someone says Porsh instead of Porsche? Yeah that f**ks me up as well…
Äppel Kompjuter :D
@@Prof.Dr.Diagnose yeah but we all know it's 90% of the time coming from native English speakers. So nothing new 😂
@@azeQify it's called the vowel shift, which fucks up any attempt of an english speaker to pronounce foreign words correctly.
Why wasn't mentioned the car or the programmable computer? much more important than coffee filters or bunsen burners.
Also space rockets or elevators or TV or... or...
He didn't mention the regular car engine. The Otto-motor.
Otto was not the inventor of this system, it was Beau de Rochas.
2:09 75% is the thermal efficiency not to be confused with mechanical efficiency.
How wrong you want pronounce the German names and City names? The guy in the video: yeeeeeeeeesssssssssssss.
I thought taht the names will have an amarican accent What is noting bad but THIS? He didn’t even try to pronounce it right.
Those are literally different names he say!
But nice reaction have a nice day everyone.
Thanks for that video.
I'm missing the first Computer "Z3" from 1941 from Konrad Zuse.
plastic expanding wall plug - Artur Fischer
Apollo Saturn V - Wernher von Braun :-)
Fun fact: Johannes Gutenberg‘s printing press was, according to the Time-Life magazine, the most important invention of the whole second millennium, since every possible way to provide knowledge or inform the people basically forever, was written, until just the radio and then tv and internet came along.
He brought it to the masses and without him, humanity wouldn’t be where we are today.
And no: I don’t debate whether it was Gutenberg or Bi Shang, because that’s not the point of this comment ;)
Carl Friedrich Benz invented the car.
I would add the refrigeration technology (of course for beer brewing): en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_von_Linde
That is also used for AC.
Switzerland: Turbo
Alfred Büchi invented the Turbo in 1905. :D
not as spectacular as many of the mentioned but something impacting daily live and population growth a lot:
Justus von Liebig, a german chemist. He made many inventions in agricultural chemistry.
mineral fertilizer, meat extract (reducing meat to shelf stable powder like in soup cubes) chloroform and more.
With chemistry, some are not inventions but the discovery of its uses.
Some not mentioned things (inventions and discoveries): The car, nuclear fission, calculus, many basics of quantum mechanics, electro-magnetic radiation, continental drift, the theory of microorganisms, many basics of astronomy, some basics of heredity, pianos with metal frames, uncountable elements of mechanics.
Keep in mind that because of the history of Germany, those include things done by ethnically non-germans who were german citizens because of german imperialism (before the obvious) (dutch, belgian, czech, slowak, polish, lithuanian, hungarian, italian and so on) and things done by members of the german culture group that would have other nationalities today (austrian, swiss)
Greetings from a german x-ray technologist from Hamburg, Germany
there are more important inventions, like the first glider plane, 4 stroke engine, cars, bicicles,dynamo, motor bike, electric locomotive, glow bulb, chemical fertilizer, computer, telephone no it wasnt bell he was the first who patented it, rockets, jet planes, a lot of chemical and medical stuff and so on without german invention we would live in the stone age and we wouldnt be able to feed so much people on this planet.
Yes, they are much, much more. Just search for something for modern entertainment: printing press and followed by them the first magazine, radio, tape recorder, record player, television, antenna, walkman, remote control, computer, mp3 format, chip card ... Imagine the world without this 🤯🤯🤯
First ballistic missile V2, first cruise missile V1 .
While you are on the weapons subject, guided bombs.
@@Coyote27981 Frtiz X?
Without Gutenberg's printing press, the reformer Martin Luther found it difficult to spread his German translation of the Bible. This not only led to the founding of the Evangelical Church (Protestants), but also laid the foundation for a uniform High German language.
Protestants were called these because they protested against the grievances.
Later the printing press was also brought to England. Hence the expression upper case and lower case. Unfortunately, the printers incorrectly changed the spelling of the English language to somewhat resemble Dutch.
the profile cylinder lock is a german invention too
the light bulb was also invented by a german, thomas edison improved it slightly and then registered the patent
Jet propulsion: The jet propulsion was developed in the 1930s by Hans v. Ohain in Germany. The first flight with the Messerschmidt ME 262 jet aircraft took place in Germany in 1941.
Vertical take-off: The idea of vertical take-off was developed as early as the 1920s by German engineers such as Henrich Focke and Nicolaus Otto.
Stealth technology: Stealth technology, which reduces the visibility of aircraft and other vehicles, was developed by German scientists and engineers in the 1940s and was used during World War II. Northrop's B2 bomber is based on 1933 plans by the German flying wing aircraft Horten H.I. Von den Horten Brüder.
In Germany, companies like Telefunken and AEG played an important role in the development of television technology. The first TV with a picture tube was invented in 1897 by the German physicist Ferdinand Braun, which formed the basis of all TV sets after World War II.
Autobahns as we know them today were developed by the German engineer Fritz Todt around 1930.
Steam engine (invented by James Watt in England around 1765, but further developed in Germany)
Bunsen burner (invented by Robert Wilhelm Bunsen and Peter Desaga in 1855)
Sewing machine (improved by Karl Friedrich Gegauf around 1850)
Electric motor (developed around 1860 by Werner von Siemens and Johann Georg Halske)
Dynamo machine (invented by Werner von Siemens in 1866)
Incandescent lamp (invented by Thomas Alva Edison in the USA in 1879, but also further developed in Germany by Heinrich Göbel and Friedrich von Hefner-Alteneck)
Telephone (invented by Alexander Graham Bell in the USA in 1877, but further developed by Philipp Reis in Germany)
Aspirin (invented by Felix Hoffmann at Bayer in 1897)
Diesel engine (invented by Rudolf Diesel in 1892)
Car (invented by Karl Benz in 1885)
X-rays (discovered by Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen in 1895)
Magnetophon (invented by Fritz Pfleumer around 1935)
MP3 format (developed by the Fraunhofer Institute in 1995)
Aircraft construction: Otto Lilienthal was a German engineer and aviation pioneer and undertook the first flight in 1890. In Germany, the technology was further developed, e.g. by Ferdinand Graf von Zeppelin (zeppelins), Hugo Junkers (metal fuselage construction) and Willy Messerschmitt (aircraft such as the Messerschmitt Bf 109).
Rocket construction: Germany was a leader in rocket construction during World War II, particularly through Wernher von Braun and the team at the Peenemünde Rocket Development Center. After the war, von Braun worked in the United States and helped develop the Saturn V rocket that enabled the Apollo missions to the moon.
Computer: The first programmable computer, the Z3, was developed in 1941 by Konrad Zuse in Germany. The first electronic calculators (ENIAC) were also developed in the USA, but by German engineers such as John von Neumann and Herman Goldstine.
Internet Protocol: The Internet Protocol (TCP/IP), which forms the basis of the Internet, was developed in the United States, but the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) was originally developed by Vint Cerf and Robert E. Kahn, both of whom studied at German universities.
Space rockets: the first suborbital rocket was the V2 missile, the first rocket to fly outside atmosphere. It is the mother of all space rockets, including the giant Saturn V of the Apollo program.
In ventor: Wehrner von Braun, space engineer.
I'm wondering why Conrad Zuses invention of the first computer isn't mentioned on top one on the list.
So far I know Konrad Zuse has build the first funktional Digital Counting Machine -->> Computer in May 1941 the Z3.
Wernher von Braun the Rocket Pioneer lead your NASA to fly to the moon has build the first funktional Rockets.
Carl Linde was the builder of the first modern refrigeration machine 1873.
Just to name a few more: TV, binary, computer or car. ...
Graham bell's "first" phone was based on the Philipp Reiss telephone which was the very first
And he got an engaged tone. Lol
Personally I would have definitely added the car. Might be more world changing than the coffee filter tbh lol. Other than that maybe the modern computer.
Something else to add about Gutenberg's printing press is that generally it's said that his invention started, or at least drastically sped up the Age of Enlightenment in Europe by the end of the 17th century by making books something mass-produceable and by extension something that the general public could afford instead of just aristocrats and nobility.
I think most americans are convinced that ford invented the car. Or at least what they get thaught in school.
@@chris_0018 That idiot only changed the way cars are being manufactured but he did not invent any cars Karl Benz was the one who invented the car. Skrew those americans who believe it was ford and those who teach it.
I am actually suprised that the didn't mention the car it was literally the best invention that there is.
@@IFHD350 it's actually very debatable, who invented THE CAR at all !!! First self-motoring car was from France, by Cugnot in 1770 with a steam engine. Carl Benz only invented the first car with a combustion engine.
I think the printing press had it's main relevance much earlier, in the rise of literacy and protestantism. The enligthenment was in need of the freedom of print that was the product of those two.
@@Kilian600 First internal, Cugnot used an external combustion engine, steam.
Strange list. They could have picket more important inventions for the top 10. Things like the car, etc.
Another very important invention for Americans made by Germans: the world´s first Assault Rifle, the StG44 aka Mp44
In military technology we are still the best:
Heckler&Koch Rifles and Handguns (Mp5, Mp7, G3, G36, G28, HK416/M27, USP, MK23 and so on)
Kraus-Maffei-Wegmann LEOPARD-2 A7 MAIN BATTLE TANK
Rheinmetall KF51 PANTHER MAIN BATTLE TANK
Rheinmetall IFV PUMA
Kraus-Maffei-Wegmann Multi-Role Combat Vehicle BOXER
Rheinmetall Paratrooper and Recon mini-tank WIESEL
There is even a rumor that a german electronics company managed to construct a radar system that is able to pick up stealth (B-2/F-35/F-22).
Also the small compact Hunter U-Boats Type 205.
And of course: *Rocket Technology* , which leads to American Soldiers bringing Wernher von Braun, Nazi-Germany´s leading rocket engineer, to the US where he had a VERY huge influence to build the biggest and most powerful machine ever created by mankind - the SATURN V space rocket.
that is nothing to be proud off!
There is the Roentgen Museum in Solingen, very interesting
The biggest most important invention is not even on the list although it is arguably the biggest invention ever: the Haber-Bosch-Process. In this process Nitrogen is captured into ammonia which then is used to produce artificial fertilizer. As of 2018, the Haber process produces 230 million tonnes of anhydrous ammonia per year. Nearly 50% of the nitrogen found in human tissues originated from the Haber-Bosch process. Thus, the Haber process serves as the "detonator of the population explosion", enabling the global population to increase from 1.6 billion in 1900 to 7.7 billion by November 2018.
This invention had an impact which could only be compared to the invention of the wheel or the discovery of fire.
These great, perhaps even the greatest inventions have been forgotten: the automobile, the computer.
Gasoline engine, Jet engine ( Messersmith ME 262 ), rocket engine, first rocket, Wankel engine, mine steel frame technologie, ABS brake system, 16 Valve cylinder head ( Schrick system ) . freely variable car frame structure ( first MBQ platform ).airbag air bag improvement. After unsuccessful attempts by the Americans and the Japanese, the Germans perfected it ( Mercedes S-klasse ).Maglev system train ( original plan 1986 Transrapid 07 Germany ), Rotring System pencil,
many construction industry inventions, Bosch decopir saw, Bosch drill hammer, SDS plus / max system……. and many many inventions
I think you should do one of these for Finland as well, we've invented alot of things here that I would say pretty much everyone in modern society use every day, but 90% have no clue where it originated. For example, the very first Internet browser with a graphical interface was a finnish invention
Here's a good video listing some
ruclips.net/video/upKS3uwS25Q/видео.html
And WHO made it possible to come up with that browser?
And WHAT was is based on e.g. where had the idea been stolen from?
An "invention" like that is nothing, cause without the premisses, it could not have been done at all.
It's like with all the so called "invention" of Steve Jobs and apple - most of them were STOLEN or are based on other peoples work.
Didnt you guys invent the electronic heart beat sensor things that are used by every smart watch today?
At Min. 13:45 by x-ray Generators there is an MRI at the Picture, so this thing doesn't generate any x-rays its just a Magnet :D. Get your stuff right!
How the car wasn't mentioned? How he talks about a stupid coffee filter and not the car that literally changed everything? Lmao
There is an error in the video. The MP3 format wasn't invented by Fraunhofer, but buy guys working at the Fraunhofer Institute for Integrated Circuits.
Id recommend you to watch the Video of "Not Just Bikes" about stroads
and in the year 2003 I still used my Walkman, because the diskmans still used up too much batteries
;-)
The predecessor of the bicycle the Draisine was invented in Germany. There are some manuscripts of Leonardo da Vinci showing something similar but was never constructed in great scale to our knowledge today so it was a cheap way for poor people to get from a to b without horses or bulls to pull a wagon.
The only odd thing about the video was the city of Mainz (215k pop) being called a town ^^
What about the first walkman(stereobelt) invented by Andreas Pavel and the first game console invented by Ralph Baer?
The Germens invented also the computer
why no car from carl benz? and gottlieb daimler? and bayer?
Automobile,Carl Benz 1886. Motorcycle,Gottlieb Daimler+Wilhelm Maybach 1885. Mechanical calculator,Wilhelm Schickard, 1623. Computer, Konrad Zuse,1941. TV,Paul Nibkow,1886(patented). The list is too long to fit into the commentary section.
I can't believe, the car isn't in the list... Greetings from Germany 🤔
I think the "Inventions That Changed the World" most was the Antibabypille!
The inventor was Carl Djerassi, born in Austria. (1923)
I´m sorry that was offtopic to your video, but here there are some famous austrian machine developers too:
Victor Kaplan: Water turbine with adjustable impeller
Peter Mitterhofer: Co-inventor of the typewriter
Josef Ressel: Inventor of the ship's propeller
Josef Madersperger: Sewing machine
Hedy Lamarr: (Frequency spreading method)
Ferdinand Porsche
BTW this is my first posting in YB (after many years I´m registered here), I like your videos and your interest in Europe!
Car, Aspirin, Jeans, Lightning Bulb, Telephone 1859 by Reis (1875 by Bell), Periodic System of Elements, Generator, Bike, Motorbike, Airplane, Relativity Theory, Television, COMPUTER...
Missing the maybe 4 most important ones: 1. the car by Mercedes Benz; 2. the computer believe it or else by Zuse in the late 1930s already. This was called Zuse 3. 3. the TV; 4. the elevator.
The bicycle, the watch, the computer, the TV, the Hamburger,...
Don’t forget Penicillin which got discovered by accident. It was Alexander Fleming in 1928.
he was british!
Wankel engine (German Felix Wankel), Otto engine/Gasoline engine (German Nicolaus Otto)
How about the car (Karl F. Benz 1885), missille & moonrocket (Wernher von Braun), Highway (Autobahn Cologne-Bonn 1932)?
Es gibt noch mehr Deutsche Erfindungen die heute den Alltag erleichtern und nicht erwähnt worden. Telefon von Philipp Reis ,die Glühbirne, Wolfram- Draht, der Computer, Otto Motor,. Auto, Motorrad, Fahrrad, TV, braunsche Röhre ( Radio), Düsenantrieb ( Jet), Rakete, Helicopter, Magnetbahn, Schallplatte, Zeppelin, Geldautomat und noch vieles mehr.
Beste Grüße aus Bremerhaven 😁
Das Telephon wurde tatsächlich noch vor Reis von einem Amerikaner in New York erfunden. Aber weder er noch Reis haben ein Parent angemeldet und die bahnbrechende Nützlichkeit für die Allgemeinheit erkannt.
Johannes Gutenberg's invention, in spite of its (even for the 1400s) ridiculously simple conception, was revolutionary.
"[...] a team of US journalists voted Gutenberg as the 'man of the millennium' in 1999. Similarly, in 1999 the A&E Network ranked Gutenberg the No. 1 most influential person of the second millennium on their 'Biographies of the Millennium' countdown, while Time-Life magazine picked Gutenberg's invention as the most important of the second millennium in 1997."
(source: Wikipedia).
Instead of writing one single book by hand within months or even years (please note: a person who owned twenty books or even more had been considered to be really wealthy by that time), you could produce books in unlimited numbers in a short length of time and at an affordable price (still expensive measured against today's standard) now and flyers (as the ancestors of newspapers) became the first real mass medium in history.
Gutenberg was the first man to make knowledge and information (and of course misinformation as well 😁) generally accessible.
not to forgett the diesel trousers !^^ 😎