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Did you know that 🤔🤔🤔
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Topic: Did you know that 🤔🤔🤔 (Read 2608 times)
MysteRy
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♥♥ Positive Thinking Will Let U Do Everything ♥♥
Re: Did you know that 🤔🤔🤔
«
Reply #90 on:
July 07, 2025, 01:34:37 PM »
🖱️🃏
“I just wanted to practice programming… and ended up creating a break for millions.”
In the late 1980s, Wes Cherry was just an intern at Microsoft. No expectations. No paycheck. Just learning to code for fun.
One day, he had a simple idea:
“What if I made a digital version of Solitaire for Windows?”
He built it in his spare time—no deadlines, no team, no glory. Just pure curiosity and a love for the game.
When Windows 3.0 launched, Solitaire was bundled with it.
The official reason?
👉 To teach people how to use a mouse by dragging cards.
The real result?
✨ It became one of the most played pieces of software in history. A quiet escape. A little mental reset. A way to not think for a while.
Wes never made a cent from it.
No royalties. No patent.
But his tiny project became part of the emotional rhythm of an entire generation.
🎯
Wes Cherry reminds us that the simplest ideas—born from passion, not pressure—can leave the deepest impact.
Sometimes, a “little game” becomes the breather the world didn’t know it needed.
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MysteRy
Global Moderator
Classic Member
Posts: 222368
Total likes: 27563
Total likes: 27563
Karma: +2/-0
Gender:
♥♥ Positive Thinking Will Let U Do Everything ♥♥
Re: Did you know that 🤔🤔🤔
«
Reply #91 on:
July 08, 2025, 08:45:59 AM »
5,127 failed attempts.
One world-changing idea.
In the late 1970s, James Dyson had a simple but radical thought:
“What if a vacuum cleaner didn’t lose suction as the dust bag filled up?”
At the time, Dyson had already designed a cyclone particle separator for his workshop to remove paint from the air. One day, he looked at it and wondered:
“Why can’t a vacuum use this same technology?”
The idea made sense. But making it work? That took time.
A lot of it.
5 years. 5,127 prototypes.
Only the 5,128th version finally worked the way Dyson envisioned.
And he wasn’t doing it for fame.
He was doing it to avoid bankruptcy.
“There were many reasons to keep going,” he once said.
“But if I’d known it would take over five thousand prototypes… I might never have started.”
Even then, the real challenge had just begun: getting the product to market.
In the UK, no one wanted it.
So Dyson reached out to the U.S. company Amway — and for a moment, things looked promising. Until they canceled the deal.
Still, he didn’t stop.
Dyson turned to Japan, where Apex Ltd. saw the potential and launched the vacuum under the name G-Force.
The success of that one product gave him enough capital to found Dyson Appliances Ltd. — the company we know today, a global leader in home tech innovation.
Sometimes, it’s not the first idea that changes the world.
It’s the 5,128th.
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MysteRy
Global Moderator
Classic Member
Posts: 222368
Total likes: 27563
Total likes: 27563
Karma: +2/-0
Gender:
♥♥ Positive Thinking Will Let U Do Everything ♥♥
Re: Did you know that 🤔🤔🤔
«
Reply #92 on:
July 08, 2025, 08:52:22 AM »
9 Japanese Legends Who Didn't Just Build an Industry — They Rewired It.
These aren’t showroom stories. These are the men who turned nuts and bolts into national icons. No fluff — just facts and forged steel.
They didn’t build cars.
They redefined what cars could be.
1. Soichiro Honda (Honda)
A mechanic with fire in his gut and fuel in his veins. Started with motorcycles, ended up on F1 tracks. He didn’t play business — he outran it.
2. Kiichiro Toyoda (Toyota)
The son of a loom master who decided to weave an entire industry instead. Mass production. Precision. Discipline. Like a samurai of the assembly line.
3. Yoshisuke Aikawa (Nissan)
The man behind Nihon Sangyo — the “Ni-San” in Nissan. He merged tech with instinct. If he had more time, he’d have built rockets.
4. Jujiro Matsuda (Mazda)
The rebel who built an engine that didn’t act like one. The rotary — his masterpiece. Survived war, and came out swinging. Stylishly.
5. Chikuhei Nakajima (Subaru)
Started with aircrafts, grounded by war — but then came Subaru. Rockets didn’t fly, so they rolled.
6. Michio Suzuki (Suzuki)
From weaving looms to weaving through traffic. Built motorcycles that threaded asphalt and tiny cars that fit in your pocket. Mobility was his faith.
7. Yataro Iwasaki (Mitsubishi)
His ships sailed while others rowed. Founded an empire — banks, mines, transport. Mitsubishi isn’t a brand. It’s Japan’s industrial Venice.
8. Torakusu Yamaha (Yamaha)
A clockmaker who taught mechanics to sing. From organs to engines — everything he touched turned into music and motion.
9. Shozo Kawasaki (Kawasaki)
Launched steamships before it was cool. Built planes, trains, and roaring motorcycles. One of the fathers of Japanese industrialization.
Without him, Japan might still be boiling water over open fire.
When the Japanese commit — they don’t create companies.
They forge dynasties of steel and soul.
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