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10 Bizarre Products That Promised to Revolutionize the Family Home

10 Bizarre Products That Promised to Revolutionize the Family Home

10 Bizarre Products That Promised to Revolutionize the Family Home
©
Smell-O-Vision and the iSmell (1960 / 1999)
© Cans Creative/Shutterstock.com
The Dynasphere (1932)
© Wikipedia
Radithor (1920s)
© "Radithor" by BlueShift 12 is licensed under BY 2.0.
The :CueCat (2000)
© "A CueCat" by denn is licensed under BY-SA 2.0.
The Isolator (1925)
© "Hugo Gernsback wearing his Isolator -- 1925" by JFGryphon is licensed under CC0 1.0.
The Nintendo Virtual Boy (1995)
© "Virtual Boy @ Artefact" by artefactgroup is licensed under BY-ND 2.0.
The Max Factor Beauty Micrometer (1932)
© Wikimedia Commons
The Segway (2001)
© "Segway parking, Segway tour, Chiang Mai, Thailand" by David McKelvey is licensed under BY 2.0.
The de Lackner HZ-1 Aerocycle (1955)
© "The De Lackner HZ-1 Aerocycle 1956" by army.arch is licensed under BY 2.0.
Nabaztag (2005)
© "Rafi Haladjian with his invention" by Robert Scoble is licensed under BY 2.0.
10 Bizarre Products That Promised to Revolutionize the Family Home
Smell-O-Vision and the iSmell (1960 / 1999)
The Dynasphere (1932)
Radithor (1920s)
The :CueCat (2000)
The Isolator (1925)
The Nintendo Virtual Boy (1995)
The Max Factor Beauty Micrometer (1932)
The Segway (2001)
The de Lackner HZ-1 Aerocycle (1955)
Nabaztag (2005)

10 Bizarre Products That Promised to Revolutionize the Family Home

Trying to predict what tomorrow will look like is a fool's errand. We can get a few things right, but the future we tend to imagine is usually limited by the technology we already have. It’s also shaped by what we already know and care about as a society. Life never moves in a straight line, and the products we thought would define the future rarely do.

Certain products seem like the future. It's only when we look back that we realize how bizarre they actually were. Sometimes it's poor planning and execution. Other times, the reason is deeper: Failure to understand what we truly value as human beings.

None of the products on this list were off-the-wall ideas or fringe experiments. They had real funding and real marketing behind them, and in some cases, the full backing of major corporations and government institutions. None of them made it, and that's probably a good thing.

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