Monday, May 13, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

First Selfie Stick Appeared In 1980s

Darpan News Desk IANS, 20 Apr, 2015 12:46 PM
    Do you have any idea when the first selfie stick was invented? Well, it was invented in the 1980s by Hiroshi Ueda, who worked for the Minolta camera company at the time and was a keen photographer, BBC reported.
     
    "Once, when I was in the Louvre Museum in Paris, I asked a child to take a photo of us, but when I stepped away, the child ran away with my camera," he was quoted as saying.
     
    Ueda came up with the "extender stick" -- an extendable stick with a tripod screw that was designed for use with a new and small camera.
     
    He added a mirror to the front of the camera, so that photographers could see exactly what they were doing. The extender was patented in 1983 but it didn't become a commercial success, as it was thought to be an "unnecessary" invention.
     
    And today, the same selfie sticks have become so popular they are being seen as a menace and being banned from museums, art galleries and conferences.
     
    Canadian toy and gadget inventor Wayne Fromm likes to take the credit for the popularity of the selfie sticks.
     
    He developed the Quik Pod, a hand-held extendable selfie stick in the early 2000s. He was unaware of Ueda's earlier design, though he too came up with the idea during a European holiday.
     
    Fromm disclosed Ueda's extender in his patent as "prior art", but he believes the current selfie stick craze is a direct result of his own model.
     
    "It happened because of my work, and I can show a paper trail of that. There's lots of knock-offs of my product that actually have my daughter's picture on the packaging," Fromm was quoted as saying.
     
    Fromm's product has sold well, but there are plenty of others profiting from it too, by producing cheap knock-offs. So many, in fact, that it is impossible to pursue them all.
     
    "It's that you're actually creating something fun, useful or helpful for people. So, I'm happy that the world has embraced the selfie stick," he said.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Emojis Get Different Skin Colour Options In The Latest Version Of Apple's Operating System

    Emojis Get Different Skin Colour Options In The Latest Version Of Apple's Operating System
    NEW YORK — Lovers of emojis, the cute graphics that punctuate online writing and texts, will soon be able to pick from different skin tones on Apple devices.

    Emojis Get Different Skin Colour Options In The Latest Version Of Apple's Operating System

    YouTube's New Mobile App To Help Parents Control What Their Kids Watch Online

    YouTube's New Mobile App To Help Parents Control What Their Kids Watch Online
    SAN FRANCISCO — YouTube is going to release a mobile app that will only show video clips suitable for young children to help parents control what their kids are watching on the Internet.

    YouTube's New Mobile App To Help Parents Control What Their Kids Watch Online

    Nearly 1 In 10 Anglophone Canadians No Longer Watch Any TV, Just Web Video

    Nearly 1 In 10 Anglophone Canadians No Longer Watch Any TV, Just Web Video
    Nearly one in 10 anglophone Canadians say they no longer watch any TV shows the old-fashioned way and only stream or download content online, according to a new study.

    Nearly 1 In 10 Anglophone Canadians No Longer Watch Any TV, Just Web Video

    Nomophobic? Calgary Company Hopes App Will Become New Weapon Against Distracted Driving

    Nomophobic? Calgary Company Hopes App Will Become New Weapon Against Distracted Driving
    CALGARY — An Alberta company hopes a new smartphone app will help so-called nomophobia sufferers who can't put their devices down while behind the wheel.

    Nomophobic? Calgary Company Hopes App Will Become New Weapon Against Distracted Driving

    Allowing For Disturbing Online Behaviour Can Be A Good Thing, Says Expert

    Allowing For Disturbing Online Behaviour Can Be A Good Thing, Says Expert
    Keeping troubling online behaviour open to public scrutiny provides a valuable tool for staging an effective intervention, said the University of Waterloo professor in an interview on Monday.

    Allowing For Disturbing Online Behaviour Can Be A Good Thing, Says Expert

    Print A 3D Selfie Of Your Body

    Print A 3D Selfie Of Your Body
    Dusseldorf-based DOOB 3D can produce a detailed, four-inch figurine of your body, or in other words, a 3D selfie, reported Wired.com.

    Print A 3D Selfie Of Your Body