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H. L. Mencken, who was born in 1880, published in 1931 his musings on the progress of technology in his first half century, and in particular which invention he was most grateful for.  While conceding that telephones had become indispensable, he also noted that they were "the greatest boon to bores ever invented", and he similarly disposed of the radio, the phonograph, the movies, and the automobile, before settling on the thermostat, to which he had converted during W.W. I & to which he devoted two whole pages of praise.

In a similar spirit, looking back on the past 74 years, I suppose the computer might be a choice; however, it is not really one development, but a congeries of interpenetrating inventions: not only fast arithmetic, but cheap long-distance communication, video displays, satellites, and so on.  If I had to choose one well-defined improvement, I think it would be plastic bags, which (IIRC) became cheap & widely available in the 1960s.  Before then, if you went shopping, you usually carried off the merchandise in a paper bag without handles, which you had to put your hands under, so that your arms were aching when you got home.  If you were packing a suitcase (respectable people didn't use backpacks), there was no convenient way of segregating things of different sizes or uses; now, you can put things in bags that reveal their contents, and pack those.  If you wanted to put leftovers in the fridge, there was nothing for it but to put them in something that later had to be washed.  If you were going hiking or (worse) boating, there was no good way to pack things so that they wouldn't get wet.

Most wondrous of all, plastic bags may well deserve the credit for the spectacular decline in insect pests during my lifetime.  I spent most of my childhood in prosperous suburbs with bourgeois sanitation, but everybody made continual war using flyswatters, flypaper, and Flit guns.  In those days, garbage was put out for collection without wrapping, in battered galvanized-iron cans with loose-fitting lids & (soon enough) rusty holes.  The results were not as bad as in Mencken's reminiscences of the 1880s, when Baltimore had horses, backyard privies, & open sewers, but the change since then has been almost as spectacular.  I still maintain a flyswatter, but occasions for using it are down to one or two a year.  So late as 1960, when I lived in Cambridge, MA, I used to have to kill half a dozen mosquitoes before I went to sleep.  (I could slap them in the dark with fair efficiency when they got near my ears.)  These days, in Malden, a mosquito bite is a rarity.  The improvement in public health due to cheap sealing must be considerable.

Sure enough, TANSTAAFL.  I hear that there is by now a considerable floating island of plastic bags somewhere in the Pacific, and it's not good for the fishes.
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I was delighted with the news, in a recent posting of Snousle's, that high-class toaster ovens exist.  They are expensive, but toaster ovens are not the kind of thing I would need a mortgage on.  I will probably look them up when my current Black & Decker expires.  It has given me good service for 11 years, but I dare say its days are numbered.  I had thought of toaster ovens as belonging to a class of commodities that have no high end, and am glad to find I was mistaken, or at least am mistaken by now.

Similarly, it used to be that there was no such thing as a first-rate T-shirt.  In particular, none of them were long enough to allow for shrinkage; they wouldn't stay tucked in after they had been washed a few times.  In recent years, however, some of the manufacturers have cottoned to the situation, and some vendors actually offer a choice of lengths for the variety of torso shapes.

It still appears that there are no luxury electric frying pans (or grills, or whatever).  A properly designed one would have a finely distributed heating element (not just one loop) to provide spatially uniform heating, and the control would not be a thermostat, but a variable transformer so that I could set a uniform current at any level.  That would be expensive, and I suppose the idea is, if you are in the market for an electric frying pan, you don't have much money.  (Stovetop cookware, of course, comes in many degrees of fanciness.  I once heard of someone who owned a sterling silver omelet pan.)

Having no car, I give my shopping--laundry cart heavy use, and I would be willing to pay a premium for a good one.  I managed to extract from the Web one that is much tougher than anything I could find in a store, but I have already had to replace one of the wheels (I saved the wheels from previous carts), and I suppose the welds will come loose in due time.  Also, it has no swivels.  (I once bought one that had swivels, but it turned out to be too small & to take all my strength to steer it.)

For a while (1964--1972) I did have a car, and I used to wonder why you couldn't buy a muffler & exhaust pipe that were lined with some refractory material & wouldn't rust out.  What you got by paying extra for a car was mainly showoff stuff.  Perhaps by now there is sufficient prevalence of sense among car buyers to make a market for such a thing; I haven't kept up with the business.

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