Stuff that's newer than ICD-9-CM:

Walkman, 1979 1 Today we take music on the move for granted - naturalists have even speculated that future iPod generations will evolve headphone jacks where our tails used to sprout. Well, not really, but most of today's music listeners will not remember a time when mobile music meant groaning under the weight of a ghettoblaster. Sony came up with the first popular personal stereo cassette player, although the German-Brazilian Andreas Pavel had patented a similar device called the Stereobelt in 1978. The Walkman was commissioned by the firm's opera-loving chief, Akio Morita (see CD), who wanted to access all arias on plane flights.
Polar fleece, 1979 3 Polar fleece, or "fleece", is a soft napped insulating synthetic wool fabric made from polyethylene terephthalate or other synthetic fibers. Found in jackets, hoodies, and casual wear, fleece has some of wool's finest qualities but weighs a fraction of the lightest available woolens. The first form of polar fleece was invented in 1979 by Malden Mills, now Polartec LLC., which was a new, light, and strong pile fabric meant to mimic and in some ways surpass wool.
VisiCalc, 1979 23 The first spreadsheet computer application is credited for making the computer into a serious business tool. Invented by Dan Bricklin and Bob Frankston it was written for the Apple II but soon was available for the PET, the Atari and the IBM PC.
Trivial Pursuit, 1979 23 A board game where advancement is gained by answering questions about popular culture on cards. It was invented in Montreal, Canada by Chris Haney and Scott Abbott.
Post-It Notes, 1980 2  
Abortion pill; Hepatitis B vaccine, 1980 5  
World Health Organization announced smallpox had been eradicated, 1980 24  
Pac Man video game debuts, 1980 24  
Rubik's Cube invented, 1980 24  
MS-DOS invented, 1981 6  
NutraSweet invented, 1981 25  
Scanning tunnelling microscope, 1981 5  
IBM Personal computer, 1981 2  
Control-Alt-Delete, 1981 3 Control-Alt-Delete, often abbreviated as Ctrl-Alt-Del, is a computer keyboard command on PC compatible systems that can be used to reboot a computer, and summon the task manager or operating system. It is invoked by pressing the Delete key while holding the Control and Alt keys: Ctrl+Alt+Delete. Thus, it forces a soft reboot, brings up the task manager (on Windows and BeOS) or a jump to ROM monitor. Control-Alt-Delete was invented in 1981 by David Bradley while working at IBM.
Total internal reflection fluorescence microscope, 1981 3 A total internal reflection fluorescence microscope is a type of microscope with which a thin region of a specimen, usually less than 200 nm, can be observed. It can also be used to observe the fluorescence of a single molecule, making it an important tool of biophysics and quantitative biology. Daniel Axelrod invented the first total internal reflection fluorescence microscope in 1981.
Space shuttle, 1981 3 The Space Shuttle, part of the Space Transportation System (STS), is a spacecraft operated by NASA for orbital human spaceflight missions. It carries payloads to low Earth orbit, provides crew rotation for the International Space Station (ISS), and performs servicing missions. The orbiter can also recover satellites and other payloads from orbit and return them to Earth. In 1981, NASA successfully launched its reusable spacecraft called the Space Shuttle. George Mueller, an American from St. Louis, Missouri is widely credited for jump starting, designing, and overseeing the Space Shuttle program after the demise of the Apollo program in 1972.
Paintball, 1981 3 Paintball is a game in which players eliminate opponents by hitting them with pellets containing paint usually shot from a carbon dioxide or compressed-gas, HPA or N20, in a powered paintball gun. The idea of the game was first conceived and co-invented in 1976 by Hayes Noel, Bob Gurnsey, and Charles Gaines. However, the game of paintball was not first played until June 27, 1981.
Graphic User Interface, 1981 3 Short for Graphic User Interface, the GUI uses windows, icons, and menus to carry out commands such as opening files, deleting files, moving files, etc. and although many GUI Operating Systems are operated by using a mouse, the keyboard can also be used by using keyboard shortcuts or arrow keys. The GUI was co-invented at Xerox PARC by Alan Kay and Douglas Engelbart in 1981.
Human growth hormone genetically engineered, 1982 6  
Laptop, 1982 1 A sturdy lap was required to support the earliest portable computers. The Osborne 1, released in 1981, often stakes a claim as the first laptop but it looked more like a sewing machine than today's sleek machines, and tipped the scales at more than 10kg. Introduced a year later, the GriD Compass 1100, designed by Brit Bill Moggridge, is a more likely contender. It was the first laptop to sport the now standard "clamshell" case and its lightweight build (5kg) made it a hit with Nasa and US paratroopers.
Internet, 1983 3 Not to be confused with a separate application known as the World wide web which was invented much later in the early 1990s (see article on the English inventor Tim Berners-Lee), the Internet is the global system of overall interconnected computer networks that use the standardized Internet Protocol Suite (TCP/IP) to serve billions of users worldwide. It is a network of networks that consists of millions of private and public, academic, business, and government networks of local to global scope that are linked by copper wires, fiber-optic cables, wireless connections, and other technologies. The concept of packet switching of a network was first explored by Paul Baran in the early 1960s, and the mathematical formulations behind packet switching were later devised by Leonard Kleinrock. On October 29, 1969, the world's first electronic computer network, the ARPANET, was established between nodes at Leonard Kleinrock's lab at UCLA and Douglas Engelbart's lab at the Stanford Research Institute (now SRI International). Another milestone occurred in 1973 when Bob Kahn and Vinton Cerf co-invented Internet Protocol and Transmission Control Protocol while working on ARPANET at the United States Department of Defense. The first TCP/IP-wide area network was operational on January 1, 1983, when the United States' National Science Foundation (NSF) constructed the university network backbone that would later become the NSFNet. This date is held as the "birth" of the Internet.
Camcorder, 1983 1 It wasn't long ago that capturing moving images required a crew of grubby-handed technicians, yards of magnetic tape and a camera the size of a garden shed. These days, anyone can call themselves a film-maker. Sony was the first to produce a consumer camcorder with the release of its Betamovie in 1983.
Soft bifocal contact lens invented, 1983 6  
First Cabbage Patch Kids sold, 1983 6  
Laserdisc storage, 1984 2  
The Apple Macintosh invented, 1984 6  
LCD projector, 1984 3 An LCD projector is a type of video projector for displaying video, images or computer data on a screen or other flat surface. It is a modern equivalent of the slide projector or overhead projector. To display images, LCD (liquid-crystal display) projectors typically send light from a metal-halide lamp through a prism or series of dichroic filters that separates light to three polysilicon panels - one each for the red, green and blue components of the video signal. The LCD projector was invented in 1984 by Gene Dolgoff.
Windows program invented by Microsoft, 1985 6  
High temperature superconductor, 1986 5  
Fuji introduced the disposable camera, 1986 6  
Disposable contact lenses, 1987 5  
Facsimile (fax) machine, 1988 2  
Noise-cancelling headphones, 1988 1 So they haven't cured pandemics or furthered man's understanding of the universe, but for airline passengers allergic to the sound of crying babies or easily distracted office workers, headphones that block out the ambient din are a life-saver. The story goes that, on a flight to Europe, Amar Bose, the billionaire founder of the Bose audio equipment firm, was so unimpressed with the complementary pair of cans, he set about making a pair that could generate sound waves to neutralise incoming noise.
Luggage (tilt-and-roll), 1988 3 Airline passengers rolling their luggage in an airport terminal Tilt-and-roll luggage or wheeled luggage, is a variant of luggage for travelers which typically contains two-fixed wheels on one end and a telescoping handle on the opposite end for vertical movement. Tilt-and-roll luggage is pulled and thus eliminates a traveler from directly carrying his or her luggage. In 1988, Northwest Airlines pilot Robert Plath invented tilt-and-roll luggage as travelers beforehand had to carry suitcases in their hands, toss garment bags over their shoulders, or strap luggage on top of metal carts.
Digital cellular phones invented, 1988 6  
Prozac invented at the Eli Lilly Company by inventor Ray Fuller, 1988 6  
Nicotine patch, 1988 3 A nicotine patch is a transdermal patch that releases nicotine into the body through the skin. It is usually used as a method to quit smoking. The nicotine patch was invented in 1988 by Murray Jarvik, Jed Rose and Daniel Rose.
Nintendo Gameboy, 1989 1 On its release in the late 1980s, the Gameboy was surely the most coveted piece of kit in the playground, but dig one out of the attic today and its two-tone grey face and titchy screen give few clues to its extraordinary success. Many companies would try to better it but none could come close to toppling the Gameboy, and its stable of killer games, including Tetris and Super Mario Land, as the best-selling gaming system of all time (worldwide sales reached well over 100m).
ZIP file format, 1989 3 The ZIP file format is a data compression and file archiver. A ZIP file contains one or more files that have been compressed to reduce file size, or stored as-is. The zip file format was originally invented in 1989 by Phil Katz for PKZIP, and evolved from the previous ARC compression format by Thom Henderson.
High-definition television invented, 1989 6  
World Wide Web and Internet protocol (HTTP) and WWW language (HTML) created by Tim Berners-Lee, 1990 7  
Digital answering machine invented, 1991 7  
SMS, 1992 1 Linguist purists H8 txtspk. The Short Message Service (SMS) has developed the thumbs of a generation of communicators who have devised their own shorthand, textspeak, to stay in touch (and uncover extra-marital affairs). The British engineer Neil Papworth sent the first (unabbreviated) text 15 years ago. It read: "MERRY CHRISTMAS". Their popularity exploded in the late 1990s and now in the UK alone we send millions every day (a record 214 million last New Year's Eve).
Spinner (wheel), 1992 4 A spinner is a type of hubcap that spins independently inside of a wheel itself when the vehicle is in motion, and continues to spin once the vehicle has come to a stop. Being an attachment to the car's wheel, spinners operate by using one or more roller bearings to isolate the spinner from the wheel, allowing it to turn while the wheel is at rest. The invention of the spinner is credited to James J.D. Gragg of Tulsa, Oklahoma who filed a patent on October 28, 1992 and was issued U.S. patent #5,290,094 on March 4, 1994.
Pentium processor invented, 1993 7  
GPS for civilians, 1993 19 By December 1993, GPS achieved initial operational capability (IOC), indicating a full constellation (24 satellites) was available and providing the Standard Positioning Service (SPS).
HIV protease inhibitor invented, 1994 7  
Digital camera, 1994 2  
DNA computing, 1994 4 DNA computing is a form of computing which uses DNA, biochemistry and molecular biology, instead of the traditional silicon-based computer technologies. DNA computing, or, more generally, molecular computing, is a fast developing interdisciplinary area. Research and development in this area concerns theory, experiments and applications of DNA computing. DNA computing is fundamentally similar to parallel computing in that it takes advantage of the many different molecules of DNA to try many different possibilities at once. This field was initially invented by Leonard Adleman of the University of Southern California in 1994. Adleman demonstrated a proof-of-concept use of DNA as a form of computation which solved the seven-point Hamiltonian path problem.
Segway PT, 1994 4 A top-down view of a Segway PT The Segway PT is a two-wheeled, self-balancing, zero-emission, electric vehicle used for "personal transport". Segways have had success in niche markets such as transportation for police departments, military bases, warehouses, corporate campuses or industrial sites, as well as tourism. The earliest patent resembling the modern Segway PT, U.S. patent #6,357,544, was filed on May 27, 1994 and issued to Dean Kamen on December 30, 1997. However, it wasn't until 2001 when Kamen finally introduced his invention to the public.
Amazon Founded, 1994 10 Founded by Jeff Bezos in 1994, Amazon is the largest online retailer in the world. In 1995, Amazon made its online debut as a bookstore, eventually adding movies, music, electronics, computer software and many other consumer goods to its diversified offerings. Amazon's initial public offering took place on May 15, 1997 at a price of $18 per share, rising to more than $100 and subsequently dropping to less than $10 after the bubble burst. Like other dotcoms, Amazon's business plan focused more on brand recognition and less on income, and it did not turn a profit until the fourth quarter of 2001. Today, Amazon trades at over $200 per share, and employs more than 37,000 people with reported net sales of $9.86 billion.
Google founded, 1995 9  
DVD (digital video disk), 1995 2  
Scroll wheel, 1995 4 A scroll wheel, or mouse wheel, is a hard plastic or rubbery disc on a computer mouse that is used for scrolling up or down on a web page. It is perpendicular to the mouse surface and is normally located between the left and right mouse buttons. The scroll wheel was invented at Microsoft by Eric Michelman in 1995. On December 16, 1998, Michelman filed the earliest patent for a scroll wheel, U.S. patent #6,940,488, which was later issued to him on September 6, 2005.
JavaScript, 1995 4 JavaScript is a scripting language widely used for client-side web development. It was the originating dialect of the ECMAScript standard. It is a dynamic, weakly typed, prototype-based language with first-class functions. JavaScript was influenced by many languages and was designed to look like Java, but be easier for non-programmers to work with. In 1995, JavaScript was invented by Brendan Eich under the name Mocha, which was later renamed to LiveScript, and finally to JavaScript.
Ebay Founded, 1995 10 Founded by Pierre Omidyar in 1995, eBay is a popular online auction and retail presence. eBay showed extraordinary growth early on, as the number of hosted auctions flew from 250,000 during 1996 to 2 million during just the first month of 1997. On September 21, 1998 eBay went public at an IPO price of $18; prices had no trouble topping $53 on the first day of trading. eBay expanded its product categories to include practically anything that can sell - from antiques and gold coins to automobiles and real estate - and also incorporated different, more popular types of auctions. These moves proved successful for eBay, which now has more than 17,000 employees with reported revenues topping $9 billion.
Adobe Flash, 1996 4 Adobe Flash is a multimedia platform created by Macromedia and currently developed and distributed by Adobe Systems. Since its introduction in 1996, Flash has become a popular method for adding animation and interactivity to web pages. The program Flash was invented in 1996 by Jonathan Gay while in college and extended it while working for Silicon Beach Software and its successors.
Reed Hastings and fellow software executive Marc Randolph co-found Netflix to offer online movie rentals. 1997 11  
Viagra invented, 1998 7  
Blackberry, 1999 1 Ask the average office worker what he or she thinks of their Blackberry and they will variously call it (if they're not furiously tapping away at one) a boon and a curse. Developed by the Canadian firm Research in Motion and unleashed in 1999, the gizmo has provided legions of roaming desk jockeys with a hotline to their inboxes, and enabled armies of bosses to keep employees digitally shackled to their swivel chairs. The addictiveness of the device led it to be dubbed the "Crackberry"
Digital TV recorder, 1999 1 In homes full of slimmed-down TVs and gleaming DVD players, video cassettes, with their clunky heads and jam-prone magnetic tape, look decidedly dated and are a more common site at car boot sales than on living-room shelves. That is thanks, in part, to the rise of the digital recorder, which (almost) silently lays down programmes on a computer hard disk. The first consumer systems came from ReplayTV and TiVo, and have been joined in the UK by Sky+, as well as cable and Freeview hard-disk recorders.
Phase-change incubator, 1999 4 The phase-change incubator is a low-cost, low-maintenance incubator to help test for microorganisms in water supplies. It uses small balls containing a chemical compound that, when heated and then kept insulated, will stay at 37C (approx. 99F) for 24 hours. The phase-change incubator was invented in 1999 by MIT professor and engineer Amy B. Smith.
iBOT, 1999 4 The iBOT is a stable and mobile powered wheelchair that balances on two of a total of six wheels. The iBOT is capable of stair climbing as well as the user having the ability to make eye-contact with a standing individual. The iBOT was invented by Dean Kamen in 1999. Kamen filed U.S. patent #6311794 on October 27, 1999 and later being issued on November 6, 2001.
First Find-A-Code CD created, 1999  
iPod, 2001 1 Can it really be just six years since the now ubiquitous slab of sleek white plastic and polished steel burst on to the gadget scene and helped to revolutionize the music industry? Conceived by Apple's British design luminary, Jonathan Ive, the iPod, the largest of which can store more than 30,000 songs, has sold an astonishing 110m units in 14 incarnations (that's an average 2,000 iPods an hour).
Artificial liver invented by Dr. Kenneth Matsumura and Alin Foundation, 2001 8  
TSA founded, 2001 13 The Aviation and Transportation Security Act, passed by the 107th Congress and signed on November 19, 2001, established TSA and required the completion of more than 30 mandates by the end of 2002. In the largest civilian undertaking in the history of the United States, TSA met each one of these initial requirements including a) Assuming responsibility for all civil aviation security functions from the Federal Aviation Administration, b) Hiring, training and deploying security officers for over 400 commercial airports from Guam to Alaska in 12 months, c) Providing 100 percent screening of all checked baggage for explosives by December 31, 2002.
Birth control patch invented by Ortho McNeil Pharmaceutical, 2002 8  
Camera phones, 2003 2  
Optical Camouflage System invented by Susumu Tachi, Masahiko Inami, and Naoki Kawakami, 2003 8  
Toyota's Hybrid Car, 2003 8  
LinkedIn founded, 2003 17 In late 2002, Reid recruits a team of old colleagues from SocialNet and PayPal to work on a new idea. Six months later, LinkedIn launches. Growth is slow at first-as few as 20 signups on some days-but, by the fall, it shows enough promise to attract an investment from Sequoia Capital.
Translucent Concrete, 2004 8 Translucent Concrete developed by Hungarian architect Aron Losonczi and called LitraCon and is based on a matrix of parallel optical glass fibers embedded into the concrete that can transmit light and color from the outside. However, this is not the only translucent concrete out there. Inventor Bill Price has been developing another variety.
Facebook founded, 2004 12 Facebook is an online social networking service headquartered in Menlo Park, California. Its website was launched on February 4, 2004, by Mark Zuckerberg with his college roommates and fellow Harvard University students Eduardo Saverin, Andrew McCollum, Dustin Moskovitz and Chris Hughes. The founders had initially limited the website's membership to Harvard students, but later expanded it to colleges in the Boston area, the Ivy League, and Stanford University. It gradually added support for students at various other universities and later to high-school students.
YouTube, 2005 8 The online video sharing and viewing community - was invented in 2005 by Steve Chen, Chad Hurley and Jawed Karim. YouTube was named Time Magazines Invention of the year in 2006.
Twitter founded, 2006 16 Twitter was created in March 2006 by Jack Dorsey, Evan Williams, Biz Stone and Noah Glass and launched by July 2006. The service rapidly gained worldwide popularity, with more than 100 million users who in 2012 posted 340 million tweets per day. The service also handled 1.6 billion search queries per day. In 2013 Twitter was one of the ten most-visited websites, and has been described as "the SMS of the Internet." As of December 2014, Twitter has more than 500 million users, out of which more than 284 million are active users.
Nanowire battery, 2007 4 A nanowire battery is a lithium-ion battery consisting of a stainless steel anode covered in silicon nanowires. Silicon, which stores ten times more lithium than graphite, allows a far greater energy density on a steel anode, thus reducing the mass of the battery. The high surface area further allows for fast charging and discharging. The practicality of nanowire batteries is reasoned that a laptop computer that runs on a regular lithium-ion battery for two hours could potentially operate up to 20 hours using a nanowire battery without recharging, which would be a considerable advantage for many people resulting in energy conservation and cost savings. The nanowire battery was co-invented in 2007 by Chinese-American Dr. Yi Cui, an assistant professor of materials science and engineering along with his colleagues at Stanford University.
Netflix starts streaming, 2007 11 Netflix introduces streaming, which allows members to instantly watch television shows and movies on their personal computers.
Find-A-Code goes online, 2007 The first of it's kind online digital library of medical coding and billing information (including ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS) opens for business. Subscribers hail it as "the best thing to happen to coding since, well... EVER!"
Bionic contact lens, 2008 4 A bionic contact lens is a digital contact lens worn directly on the human eye which in the future, scientists believe could one day serve as a useful virtual platform for activities such as surfing the World Wide Web, superimposing images on real-world objects, playing video games for entertainment, and for monitoring patients' medical conditions. The bionic contact lens is a form of nanotechnology and microfabrication constructed of light emitting diodes, an antenna, and electronic circuit wiring. The bionic contact lens is the 2008 creation of Iranian-American Babak Parviz, an electrical engineer at the University of Washington (UW) in Seattle.
AIDS Vaccine, 2009 14 In a field that has seen more failure than success, experts received the news of an effective new AIDS vaccine with a fair share of skepticism. In September, a $105 million trial of a novel combination of two older vaccines was the first to show protection against HIV infection. The results of the trial, which involved more than 16,000 volunteers, suggested that the vaccine was 31% effective at preventing infection among those who were inoculated. It was a modest outcome, given that behavior-based prevention methods, like condom use, can be equally if not more effective. The volunteers were also largely heterosexual and monogamous, putting them at low-to-moderate risk for HIV infection - rather than high-risk, like intravenous drug users - and prompting questions about how impressive the results of the study really were. But given that no other inoculation has shown any effect against the AIDS virus, it was reason to celebrate - cautiously.
Funding Ban Lifted on Stem-Cell Research, 2009 15 It was eight years in coming - which felt like eons to some researchers - but on March 9, President Obama rescinded his predecessor's Executive Order prohibiting the use of federal money to fund research on stem cells. A congressional law still prevents scientists from using government funds to create new lines of embryonic stem cells, which can develop into any of the body's tissues, but at least scientists are now free to use that money to study the hundreds of stem-cell lines already in existence. Before embarking on such research, however, scientists had to wait for a working group at the National Institutes of Health to vet the stem-cell lines and ensure that they were generated responsibly, according to stringent ethical and scientific principles. In December, the first lines to pass this test became available.
A New Element - Maybe, 2010 18 Lead, iron and uranium are nothing compared to ununseptium, the temporary name for element 117, an extremely heavy combination of berkelium and calcium isotopes created in a particle accelerator in Dubna, Russia. The new element existed for only the tiniest fraction of a second before vanishing again - and it must be independently created elsewhere before it earns a permanent spot on the periodic table of the elements - but the fact that it remained stable for even the fleeting instant it did is promising. The heavier artificial elements get, the less stable they become, until they reach a point at which the curve turns back up and they begin to last longer and longer. Ununseptium is on the upward part of that arc suggesting that what physicists call "islands of stability" may exist, at which the heaviest elements of all could last for months or years. The periodic table, it seems, has yet to be fully set.
New Particle Discovered, 2012 20 CERN announces the discovery of a new particle with properties consistent with the Higgs boson after experiments at the Large Hadron Collider.
3D Ear Printed, 2013 21 American scientists use a 3D printer to create a living lab-grown ear from collagen and animal ear cell cultures. In the future, it is hoped, similar ears could be grown to order as transplants for human patients suffering from ear trauma or amputation.
Creation of human embryonic stem cells by cloning , 2013 21 In a study published in the scientific journal Nature, researchers from Oregon Health & Science University in the United States describe the first creation of human embryonic stem cells by cloning.
Chinese spacecraft lands on the moon, 2013 21 Chinese spacecraft Chang'e 3, carrying the Yutu rover, becomes the first spacecraft to "soft"-land on the Moon since 1976 and the third ever robotic rover to do so.
Outbreaks, 2014 22 The Ebola virus epidemic in West Africa begins, infecting over 25,000 people and killing at least 10,000 people, the most severe both in terms of numbers of infections and casualties. The World Health Organization identifies the spread of poliomyelitis in at least 10 countries as a major worldwide health emergency.
US and Cuba Kiss and Make Up, 2014 22 U.S. President Barack Obama announces the resumption of normal relations between the U.S. and Cuba.

Sources:

1  http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/features/101-gadgets-that-changed-the-world-398535.html
2  http://www.factmonster.com/ipka/A0768871.html
3  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_United_States_inventions_%281946%E2%80%9391%29
4  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_United_States_inventions_(after_1991)
5  http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/inventions_1900_to_1990.htm
6  http://inventors.about.com/od/timelines/a/modern_4.htm
7  http://inventors.about.com/od/timelines/a/modern_5.htm
8  http://inventors.about.com/od/timelines/a/ModernInvention.htm
9  http://www.google.com/about/company/history/
10  http://www.investopedia.com/financial-edge/0711/5-successful-companies-that-survived-the-dotcom-bubble.aspx
11  https://pr.netflix.com/WebClient/loginPageSalesNetWorksAction.do?contentGroupId=10477
12  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facebook
13  http://www.tsa.gov/about-tsa/history
14  http://content.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1945379_1944376_1944390,00.html
15  http://content.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1945379_1944376_1944393,00.html
16  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twitter
17  https://ourstory.linkedin.com/
18  http://content.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,2035319_2034840_2034826,00.html
19  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_Positioning_System
20  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012
21  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013
22  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2014
23  http://seventies1970s.com/1979gadgets.htm
24  http://eighties1980s.com/1980gadgets.htm
25  http://eighties1980s.com/1981gadgets.htm

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