
First patent on a helicopter
More than five hundred years ago, the Italian genius Leonardo da Vinci scribbled the human flying machine known as da

More than five hundred years ago, the Italian genius Leonardo da Vinci scribbled the human flying machine known as da

Filed their invention on March 23, 1903, Orville Wright and Wilbur Wright of Dayton, Ohio, received U.S. Patent No. 821,393

It is tough to tell who invented the chair because the early designs of working chairs are found in Egyptian

The history of furniture is as old as human civilization. The clever inventor John Loughlin marked his name in history

Among the early inventors of toilet designs, Thomas Crapper is famous for this quality bath, toilet, and sink showroom. Still,

The London-based stove maker and inventor William Feetham, from Ludgate Hill earned the first patent for shower design in

Historically there has been evidence of sole propriety in Greece and Jerusalem, but in the modern world, the statutory patent system

Humans wore lipstick more than 5000 years ago, but it was nothing like the solid dab we have in

On June 30, 1896, patent no 670607 was issued to William Hadaway for his design of an electric stove. Earlier cooking

The story of the microwave invention is fascinating because the inventor Percy LeBaron Spencer never intended to invent this food warming device.

The patent stories of most of the revolutionary inventions are controversial. The same is the case for telephones. Alexander Graham Bell

The first programmable digital computer for general-purpose ENIAC in full Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer was invented during world war II.

In 1888, American inventor John J Loud received the first patent for inventing the ballpoint pen and changing writing forever. Sick of

Guglielmo Marconi the household name for inventors. This young Italian genius and experimenter in England transmitted radio signals at a

A fishing enthusiast Everett Horton from Bristol, Connecticut, was the inventor of the modern fishing pole. Awarded on Mar. 8′, 1887,

Humans have used pools and still waters for viewing themselves for centuries; later, polished metals and volcanic glass were