A gadget is a
mechanical device or any ingenious article. Gadgets are sometimes referred to as ''
gizmos''.
History
The etymology of the word is disputed. The word first appears as reference to an 18th-century tool in
glassmaking that was developed as a spring
pontil.
[Charles R. Hadjamach: ''British Glass, 1800–1914''. London. 1991. p. 35 ] As stated in the glass dictionary published by the Corning Museum of Glass, a gadget is a "metal rod with a spring clip that grips the foot of a vessel and so avoids the use of a pontil". Gadgets were first used in the late 18th century.
[ Corning Museum of Glass: ]
Glass Dictionary: Gadget
'' (accessed November 4, 2018) According to the ''
Oxford English Dictionary
The ''Oxford English Dictionary'' (''OED'') is the principal historical dictionary of the English language, published by Oxford University Press (OUP), a University of Oxford publishing house. The dictionary, which published its first editio ...
'', 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.
[ Michael Quinion: ]
World Wide Words: Gadget
'' (accessed February 6, 2008) Also in: Michael Quinion: ''Port Out, Starboard Home: The Fascinating Stories We Tell About the Words We Use''.
A widely circulated story holds that the word gadget was "invented" when Gaget, Gauthier & Cie, the company behind the
repoussé construction of the
Statue of Liberty
The Statue of Liberty (''Liberty Enlightening the World''; ) is a colossal neoclassical sculpture on Liberty Island in New York Harbor, within New York City. The copper-clad statue, a gift to the United States from the people of French Thir ...
(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, at least in the US, 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 October 1918 issue of ''
Notes and Queries'' contains a multi-article entry on the word "gadget" (12 S. iv. 187). H. Tapley-Soper of The City Library,
Exeter
Exeter ( ) is a City status in the United Kingdom, cathedral city and the county town of Devon in South West England. It is situated on the River Exe, approximately northeast of Plymouth and southwest of Bristol.
In Roman Britain, Exeter w ...
, writes:
A discussion arose at the Plymouth meeting of the Devonshire Association in 1916 when it was suggested that this word should be recorded in the list of local verbal provincialisms. Several members dissented from its inclusion on the ground that it is in common use throughout the country; and a naval officer who was present said that it has for years been a popular expression in the service for a tool or implement, the exact name of which is unknown or has for the moment been forgotten. I have also frequently heard it applied by motor-cycle friends to the collection of fitments to be seen on motor cycles. 'His handle-bars are smothered in gadgets' refers to such things as speedometers, mirrors, levers, badges, mascots, &c., attached to the steering handles. The 'jigger' or short-rest used in billiards is also often called a 'gadget'; and the name has been applied by local platelayers to the 'gauge' used to test the accuracy of their work. In fact, to borrow from present-day Army slang, 'gadget' is applied to 'any old thing.'['' Notes and Queries'']
1918 s12-IV: 281–282
(accessed June 2, 2010)
The usage of the term in military parlance extended beyond the navy. In the book ''Above the Battle'' by Vivian Drake, published in 1918 by D. Appleton & Co., of New York and London, being the memoirs of a pilot in the British
Royal Flying Corps
The Royal Flying Corps (RFC) was the air arm of the British Army before and during the First World War until it merged with the Royal Naval Air Service on 1 April 1918 to form the Royal Air Force. During the early part of the war, the RFC sup ...
, there is the following passage: "Our ennui was occasionally relieved by new gadgets—'gadget' is the Flying Corps slang for invention! Some gadgets were good, some comic and some extraordinary."
By the second half of the twentieth century, the term "gadget" had taken on the connotations of compactness and mobility. In the 1965 essay "The Great Gizmo" (a term used interchangeably with "gadget" throughout the essay), the architectural and design critic
Reyner Banham defines the item as:
A characteristic class of US products––perhaps the most characteristic––is a small self-contained unit of high performance in relation to its size and cost, whose function is to transform some undifferentiated set of circumstances to a condition nearer human desires. The minimum of skills is required in its installation and use, and it is independent of any physical or social infrastructure beyond that by which it may be ordered from catalogue and delivered to its prospective user. A class of servants to human needs, these clip-on devices, these portable gadgets, have coloured American thought and action far more deeply––I suspect––than is commonly understood.[ Reyner Banham. "The Great Gizmo." ''Design by Choice.'' Ed. Penny Sparke. Rizzoli, 1981. p. 110. Originally appeared in ''Industrial Design'' 12 (September 1965): 58-59.]
Other uses
The first
atomic bomb was nicknamed ''
the gadget'' by the Scientists of the
Manhattan Project, tested at the Trinity site.
Application gadgets
In the software industry, ''Gadget'' refers to 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
JavaScript (), often abbreviated as JS, is a programming language and core technology of the World Wide Web, alongside HTML and CSS. Ninety-nine percent of websites use JavaScript on the client side for webpage behavior.
Web browsers have ...
, form input, and various image formats. Proprietary formats include
Google Desktop,
Google Gadgets,
Microsoft Gadgets,
the AmigaOS Workbench and
dashboard software Apple Widgets.
The earliest documented use of the term ''gadget'' in context of
software engineering
Software engineering is a branch of both computer science and engineering focused on designing, developing, testing, and maintaining Application software, software applications. It involves applying engineering design process, engineering principl ...
was in 1985 by the developers of
AmigaOS
AmigaOS is a family of proprietary native operating systems of the Amiga and AmigaOne personal computers. It was developed first by Commodore International and introduced with the launch of the first Amiga, the Amiga 1000, in 1985. Early versions ...
, the
operating system
An operating system (OS) is system software that manages computer hardware and software resources, and provides common daemon (computing), services for computer programs.
Time-sharing operating systems scheduler (computing), schedule tasks for ...
of the
Amiga computers (''
intuition.library'' and also later ''gadtools.library''). It denotes what other technological traditions call ''
GUI widget''—a control element in
graphical user interface
A graphical user interface, or GUI, is a form of user interface that allows user (computing), users to human–computer interaction, interact with electronic devices through Graphics, graphical icon (computing), icons and visual indicators such ...
. This
naming convention remains in continuing use (as of 2008) since then.
The X11 windows system 'Intrinsics'
X Toolkit Intrinsics
X Toolkit Intrinsics (also known as Xt, for X toolkit) is a library that implements an API to facilitate the development of programs with a graphical user interface (GUI) for the X Window System. It can be used in the C language (or any languag ...
also defines gadgets and their relationship to widgets (buttons, labels, etc.). The gadget was a windowless widget which was supposed to improve the performance of the application by reducing the memory load on the X server. A gadget would use the Window id of its parent widget and had no children of its own.
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. In the movie "
Back to School" from 1986 by Alan Metter, there is a scene where an economics professor Dr. Barbay, wants to start for educational purposes a fictional company that produces "widgets: It's a fictional product."
See also
*
Domestic technology
*
Electronics
Electronics is a scientific and engineering discipline that studies and applies the principles of physics to design, create, and operate devices that manipulate electrons and other Electric charge, electrically charged particles. It is a subfield ...
*
List of gadget magazines
*
Gizmo (disambiguation)
*
Gadget Flow
* ''
Inspector Gadget''
*
Merchandising
*
Multi-tool
*
Widget
References
{{Reflist
Tools
Placeholder names
Software by type