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10. XBox (2002)
The reason the XBox and its 360 update get the nod over the Playstation 3 is for revolutionizing online gaming with the advent of XBox Live in 2002. Never before had you been able to meet foul-mouthed teenagers while playing video games without, you know, going to an arcade. Now if we could just stop those punks from quitting in the middle of a game when I’m beating them at FIFA 2010. Josh Jackson

9. Blackberry (2002)
By mid-decade, this series of smartphones from Canadian company Research in Motion had become known as “crackberries,” and they’d become as indispensable in business as the briefcase used to be. Josh Jackson

8. Slingbox (2005)
This genius device gives viewers access to their cable television programming anywhere with a computer and high-speed internet connection. While initially hailed as a solution for dorm-dwellers without space for a television, the slingbox has become a favorite of travelers who can’t miss their favorite shows or games just because they’re away from home. Kevin Keller

7. iPhone (2007)
When Apple launched it’s portable media player/web browser/gaming console/GPS, the phone application seemed the least of its concerns (after all, it partnered with AT&T for actual reception). But even as a phone, it added visual voicemail. And with new thousands of new apps, it’s the gadget that gets better every day. Josh Jackson

6. Amazon Kindle (2007)
Travelers need no longer preserve their novels’ final chapters for the plane ride home. The online superstore Amazon introduced its peculiar literary instrument in 2007, compacting the book and the bookstore into a single, grayscale device. The Kindle married an unlikely couple: literature and the electronic. It will remain one of the few gadgets to be never criticized for its brain-melting capabilities. And best of all, thanks to digital ink, it reads just like paper. Gage Henry

5. Wii Remote (2006)
All those arguments about video games turning children into lazy, pudgy zombies were met head on by Nintendo with the advent of the Wii, whose handheld controller could sense the boxing punch, tennis volley or basketball shot the player mimicked. Even my octogenarian friend Marty got in on the action, bowling with my nephew on Christmas day. Josh Jackson

4. Vodafone 3G Datacard (2004)
You are your own hotspot. It’s as simple as that. Laptops were meant to be mobile, so the Internet should be, too. When you can whip out your laptop in a moving car, any airport, on the bus, in the woods or in Starbucks (without paying “$9.99 for an hour”), well, that’s true Internet freedom. Others have since followed, but Vodaphone led the way. Nick Purdy

3. Garmin GPS (2000)
When judging new technologies, you have to remember what they replaced. And is there any vestigial remnant from the 20th century we’ll miss less than the fold-out car map? The first automotive navigation system was developed in the early ‘80s, but it wasn’t until an executive order eliminated the intentional margin of error the military had insisted for commercial use on May 2, 2000, that the dashboard GPS became more accurate and widely available. Now you can navigate with voice directions from Homer Simpson, Gary Busey or Kim Cattrall. And you never have to try to fold those maps again. Josh Jackson

2. TiVo DVR (1999)
That little black-and-silver box revolutionized the television experience, shifting power to the audience in an unprecedented fashion. No longer do you have to plan your schedule around your favorite shows. Had to work late, caught a ballgame or met friends for a drink instead? You can still watch your Lost (or whatever your jam is) when you get home without having to worry about blank VCR tapes. And, of course, you don’t have to suffer all those obnoxious commercial interruptions. But even beyond the more obvious benefits, TiVo inspires a sense of discovery with its recommendations function, learning your tastes based on what you already like, and helping you find great programming you might otherwise have missed. And though some units did ship in 1999, we certainly consider it an artifact of the 2000s. Steve LaBate

1. iPod (2001)
Digital music was already swinging when Apple introduced its signature device in 2001, but the iPod (enabled by its software buddy, iTunes, with its grandma-friendly syncing) mainstreamed and legalized the revolution. Who needed a shelf full of CDs when you could carry all of pop culture—first music, then TV and movies—in your pocket, accessing everything with ridiculous ease? Filling a need we didn’t know we had, the little beveled box hit the sweet spot of form and function. It drove two of the decade’s biggest obsessions: portability and personalization. And there was nothing on it that we didn’t want on it—beauty is in the iPod of the beholder. In its early days, the gadget was an instant icon of cool. Then everybody from the Pope to your dad got one, and those white earbuds were no longer the hip fashion accessory they had been in ’03—the iPod had transitioned from a cult object to an essential accoutrement of modern life. Not having a pod was like not having a microwave: unthinkable. In The Perfect Thing, Steven Levy’s book about how the iPod conquered the world, John Mayer said the device “changed the chemistry of listening.” With the shuffle feature and easy skipping, it’s all one big celestial jukebox. There are no boundaries, only playlists. Five years into the pod’s reign, a research firm polled college students about the top “in thing” on campus. The iPod was #1. Tied for #2? Facebook and beer. Phil Kloer



Being that the iPhone is an iPod with a phone, Doesn't that make it number 1?
Completely shortsighted... best invention was the garage door opener... :-)
Great list you've got there! iPod/iTouch truly deserve its spot as #1.
Without out the iPod becoming as popular as it did the iPhone never exists. Thats why it's number 1. Ditto for the iPod touch.
Seriously.. what the fuck. XBox 360? Are you kidding me?
You know Playstation 2 had online gaming long before the Xbox, right? Xbox is quite possibly the biggest piece of shit to be sold to the gaming community in the history of gaming. The fail rate is through the freaking roof. How can this possibly make the list?
I agree with the iPod being number 1. That thing is so popular.
The iPhone should be number 1.
I'm sorry but am I the only one that thinks the most important creation over the past decade was broadband? or was it created years upon years ago?
"Never before had you been able to meet foul-mouthed teenagers while playing video games without, you know, going to an arcade."
Or playing a computer game?
The best of the bunch for me has to go to the Flip Video Ultra. Amazon's Kindle and the Xbox 360 are next on my must have gadget list!
Great round up.
Karl
Are you kidding me? The garage door opener was invented in the last 10 years? Read the friggin title.
Also, the iPhone is just an improvement on the iPod. It was the iPod that required the ingenuity and creativity.
ummm--xbox by no means invented online console play. there were modems for snes etc way early, but 9/9/99 sega dreamcast came with a modem built in. ask anyone who played nfl 2k...online play and shittalking is NOT new with this generation of systems.
This article comes off as an advertisement for certain brands.
Really well done. Great choices; pithy reviews. Agree with #1 choice of iPod.
Really weak list. Looks like written by Apple fanboy with short memory. WiFi became popular with devices from Netgear and Asus (WL-500g).
What about:
- Roomba - robot vacuum cleaner
- Electric bicycles - only recently became practical due to high capacity batteries like LiPo
- Segway, Eni-cycle, Honda U3-X
- Quadcopters
- Wingsuit - parachute suit for flying
- Digital cameras - existed before 2000 but only got cheap/popular in the 2000'es
- LED light-bulb - still weak but coming on strong.
- Coffee pads espresso/coffee machines. Philips Senseo, Nespresso etc. this has become big business.
- HD flat screen LCD/plasma TV
- DVB TV receiver - analogue TV phase out
- Home theatre surround-sound
- DVD DVR and later BluRay DVR
- VoIP as a phone handset device
And further:
- GHz CPUs - AMD Athlon 1GHz launched 2000-03-06
- High speed electrical cars - Eliica drove 370km/h in 2004.
Bizarre. Like someone's Amazon wish list - personal, pointless and without general application. Why did someone bother publishing this? No iPhone?
Awesome! thanks!
The iPod controls the market now, but would have been nothing special without iTunes the software and later iTunes the store (as recognized in the article), and since software and websites are excluded from the list, that should take the iPod off of your list. Be honest. The hardware was just another MP3 player.
Apple corrupted you, fysj. Or Amazon, who knows, who cares, all this stuff are for lazy people anyways.
I am so wrong If I say that capitalism is a democratic system?? Or that it should be?
Got to say the PlayStation2 had far more impact than the PS3 and Xbox combined.
Otherwise a good list, though it's a little too early to judge the Kindle as a big hit. I'm sure its successors will be, though.
What? Kindle over iPhone? Are you out of your Vulcan mind?
If this article is a serious indication of the site's content quality, I will not be coming back.
Oh lighten up! Maybe curling up with a textbook will make you feel less like the rest of us dim-witted, gadget whores. Anyway, the article's purpose is not to arm you with enough knowledge for a PhD in gadgetry, but rather to provide a forum for us to pick apart our fellow Paste Peanut Gallery, right? Who here doesn't love a little iPod, iTouch, iPhone pissing match?
Wait! I'm just kidding. Kind of. There are so many substantive articles for you to enjoy around the site. And scads upon oodles of excellent, new music. Don't go away mad. Don't go away at all! This lousy top 10 gadget article is just one of those silly, little things that people do when they start to dread the moment where we collectively hold the pillow tight over the face of the last decade. Nostalgia about the best gadgets, records and boob jobs -oh my!.....Come on, it's fun!
Perhaps you didn't want to put Dyson on the list twice (though you had no problem doing that with Apple - not that I did either), but the Dyson Airblade is a far superior hand dryer to the Xlerator....
What is the dyson air multiplier doing on the list? Apart from the 'cool' factor of a fan with no blades they have nothing going for them. They're loud, move less air then a standard fan and cost a small fortune.
Useless device. Have you actually tried using one of these things or did you just read dyson's advertising blurb and decide it is the new sliced bread... Yeah, thought so.
i dugg your posy @ Digg.com
You have a wonderful collections of Gadgets list of Decade. Wonderful..
yup, ipod/iphone counts as 1
so maybe space for those USBCELL reusable batteries given so many of these top gadgets consumer so many batteries, particularly at christmas
Android is now pursuing dominance iPhone, unfortunately this happened at the end of the decade ..
That fanless fan looks pretty cool! I gotta get my hands on one of those!
I could actually use another one of those ipods, last one i had i dropped it off a ladder... it wasen't pretty!
http://reviewking-reviews.blogspot.com/
That Dyson Bladeless fan looks awesome! That would be a gift everyone would get a kick out of - it's just so remarkable!
The worlds first I-Pod was released in 1995 and was built in Australia by a company strangely enough called I-Pod.
And it was advertised as an i-Pod its purpose was to be an internet /information kiosk. hence the letter i
'and the word Pod had nothing to do with HAL from the movie as the movie had not been written or made at this time. It was used to infer a pod like a seed pod full of good ideas.
The bottom line is Apple computers and Steve Jobs did not come up with the name I Pod. it was Hugh Gray and if anyone wishes to check the facts they can check online the business names register at Qld.gov.au apple are aware of this if this and to dat have not paid out one penny to the original inventor who still has Authors copyright over the name. it may be of interest that the use of the letter I as in i-Pod was used by the ipod company in Australia , even before Mr Jobs used it on his I mac credit where credit is due. Steve Give the original guy who came up with the name the credit for it even if you don't want to do the right thing AND PART WITH A FEW DOLLARS
AND YES MR GRAY IS STILL STRUGGLING and coming up with new ideas all the time ideas that you could have if you do the right thing But I still wish you and all your staff and all the readers a merry Christmas and a happy new year for 2010
Come on guys.. The Xbox 360 really kick started online gaming on consoles. I had the PS2 but never played it online, and the PS2 was more an extra time spender when you didn't feel like playing on the computer. Xbox 360 changed that and moved most gaming from the comfort of your fat chair to the couch in your living room. Back before the Xbox 360 all eyes was on what was to come out in games to the PC, now most eyes are on console games.
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