Four Major Inventions During The Lifetime Of Richard Overton

By Stacey Massey


Richard Overton has the incredible distinction of being the oldest war veteran still alive. Currently 107 years of age, he lives in East Austin, Texas, and in 2013 visited the capital of the United States, Washington, D. C., for the very first time. As homage to the extraordinary life of Overton, here are four of the most influential inventions during his mammoth lifetime.

The diet of the average North american has undertaken a huge adjustment during Overton's lifespan. The increased interest in the TV set meant that meals for the normal American household needed to take account of this. Dinners would have to be handy and simple to create. Due to this, the TV dinner was invented, and became a hugely well-liked creation.

These products were inspired by the dishes on planes, which had meals which could be kept in the deep-freeze over a substantial time period and taken out at the customer's convenience. They were prepared in industrial facilities, hit the market in the 1940s and had been primarily offered at the local food store. Yet while they made watching the TV convenient, they weren't massively popular prior to fifties, which is when revenues rocketed. Though some complain that they made the focus of mealtimes more about viewing TV than about mingling with family, current estimations have their annual sales at around $4billion to $5billion.

The cell phone is a modern creation that has changed millions of lives around the globe. When it was made, like other inventions before it, it didn't really catch the imagination of the public. The DynaTAC from Motorola was huge and had to be stored in a briefcase when not in use.

These days a mobile is much lighter, usually weighing around 5 ounces and can fit in the anyone's pocket. And these days they are cheaper too, as in 1983 one of these would have set someone back around $4,000. As the devices are ever-changing, it seems the only certainty is that in 30 years time they will not be the same as they are now.

The way in which we store our food has undergone fundamental changes in the last hundred years. Refrigeration, though around for hundreds of years and constantly refined, wasn't something that had been transferred to the home arena until the 1920s. It has totally changed the way people eat all over the planet.

The Internet could be one of the most influential and powerful things to be invented over the course of the last 100 or so years. It has shrunk the world in much the same way as the telephone and allows anyone with access to a computer to communicate all around the world in real-time. It's great power is as a source of information and it has certainly changed the way people work, communicate, play, and do business.

It seems that Richard Overton has been alive for some of the most important and powerful changes in our society's history. Life is arguably much faster than at any time in history, and yet Overton credits his long life to remaining free from stress and trying to be as active as possible.




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