Dictionary Definition
gadget n : a device that is very useful for a
particular job [syn: appliance, contraption, contrivance, convenience, gizmo, gismo, widget]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
-
- Rhymes: -ædʒɪt
Noun
- a placeholder
name for any device
or machine whose name
cannot be recalled; especially
- a clever device designed for a specific practical use:
- He bought a neat new gadget for shredding potatoes.
- a complicated or awkward device:
- That's quite a lot of gadgets you have collected. Do you use any of them?
Translations
- Finnish: laite, härpätin, vekotin, vehje, värkki
- Greek: Μαραφέτι, Εργαλείο, Εξάρτημα
- Portuguese: engenhoca
See also
Extensive Definition
- This is an article about gadgets. For Wikipedia Gadgets go to .
A gadget is a small technological object (such as
a device or an appliance) that has a
particular function, but is often thought of as a novelty. Gadgets are invariably
considered to be more unusually or cleverly designed than normal
technology at the time of their invention. Gadgets are sometimes
also referred to as gizmos.
History
The origins of the word "gadget" trace back to
the 1800s. According to the Oxford
English Dictionary, there is anecdotal evidence for the use of
"gadget" as a placeholder
name for a technical item whose precise name one can't remember
since the 1850s; with Robert Brown's 1886 book Spunyarn and
Spindrift, A sailor boy’s log of a voyage out and home in a China
tea-clipper containing the earliest known usage in print. The
etymology of the word is disputed. A widely circulated story holds
that the word gadget was "invented" when Gaget, Gauthier & Cie,
the company behind the casting of the Statue of
Liberty (1886), made a small-scale version of the monument and
named it after their firm; however this contradicts the evidence
that the word was already used before in nautical circles, and the
fact that it did not become popular until after World War I. Other
sources cite a derivation from the French gâchette which has been
applied to various pieces of a firing mechanism, or the French
gagée, a small tool or accessory. The spring-clip used to hold the
base of a vessel during glass-making is also known as a gadget. The
first atomic bomb
was nicknamed the gadget by
the scientists of the Manhattan
Project, tested at the Trinity
site.
Mechanical gadgets
Clocks, bicycles, and thermometers are amongst the
very large number of gadgets that are mechanical and also very
popular. The invention of mechanical gadgets though is based more
on innovation of the inventor rather than education.
Electronic gadgets
Electronic
gadgets are based on transistors and integrated
circuits. Unlike the mechanical gadgets one needs a source of
electric
power to use it. The most common electronic gadgets include
transistor
radio, television, cell phones
and the quartz
watch.
Programmable gadgets
Most of the modern gadgets belong to this
category. These gadgets are invariably based on a microprocessor and often
have flash
memory. They use embedded software which controls their
functions. Such gadgets are found not only in the pockets of gadget
freaks, but also in their cars and homes. Some examples of gadgets
in this category are notebook
computer, mobile phone
etc.
Application gadgets
Computer programs that provide services without
needing an independent application to be launched for each one, but
instead run in an environment that manages multiple gadgets. There
are several implementations based on existing software development
techniques, like JavaScript, form
input, and various image formats.
The earliest documented use of the term gadget in
context of software
engineering was in 1985 by the developers
of AmigaOS,
the operating
system of the Amiga computers
(intuition.library
and also later gadtools.library). It denotes what other
technological traditions call widget—a control element in
graphical
user interface. This naming
convention remains in continuing use (as of 2008) since
then.
It is not known whether other software companies
are explicitly drawing on that inspiration when featuring the word
in names of their technologies or simply referring to the generic
meaning. The word widget is older in this context.
- See: Workbench (AmigaOS)
See also
References
gadget in Danish: Gadget
gadget in German: Gadget
gadget in Spanish: Gadget
gadget in Persian: ابزارک
gadget in French: Gadget
gadget in Indonesian: Gadget
gadget in Italian: Gadget
gadget in Dutch: Hebbeding
gadget in Japanese: ガジェット (電子機器)
gadget in Norwegian: Gadget
gadget in Polish: Gadżet
gadget in Portuguese: Gadget
gadget in Russian: Гаджет
gadget in Ukrainian: Ґаджет
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
affair,
apparatus, appliance, article, artifact, business, concern, contraption, contrivance, creation, device, dingus, dofunny, dohickey, dojigger, dojiggy, domajig, domajigger, doodad, dowhacky, eppes, etwas, flumadiddle, gigamaree, gimcrack, gimmick, gizmo, hand tool, hickey, hootenanny, hootmalalie, implement, instrument, invention, jigger, machine, material thing,
means, mechanical device,
mechanism, object, power tool, precision
tool, quelque chose, something, speed tool,
thing, thingum, thingumabob, thingumadad, thingumadoodle, thingumajig, thingumajigger, thingumaree, thingummy, tool, utensil, whatchy, widget