I don't think I'm obsessed with shaving. I mean, it's not
like I've ever visited a web site dedicated to the
history of Schick razors but I
have noticed that the number of blades on a safety-razor cartridge
is increasing at an amazing rate.
When I was young I remember seeing adverts trying to convince people
that two blades were better than one. The commericials had animations,
smiling people, and near-nudity... all on prime time TV. Very exciting.
The late 90's were an exciting time. The "dot com" boom was starting,
the economy was going great, it was an exciting time. Part of this
excitement was, of course, the introduction of the Mach 3 and
later the Mach 3 Turbo. Life
was good.
When the Mach 3 came out, I thought, "Gosh, it took 57 years
to go from 1 blade to 2, but only 28 years to go from 2 blades
to 3. That's an amazing accelleration of growth! I wondered
how long before we'd be graced with the 4-blade razor. Following
the current trend, it shouldn't be introduced until at least 2011.
The accellerated power increases in silicon chip technology is called
"Moore's Law": The observation, made in 1965 by Intel co-founder
Gordon Moore, that computer memory chips had doubled in capacity every
18-24 months; this trend has continued ever since the observation. He
reasoned computing power would rise exponentially with time.
Now if shaving technology was to also observe Moore's law, there
were amazing social and political ramifications. For example,
would computer users be more cleanly shaved than non-computer users?
The mind boggles.
People's boggled minds were interrupted in 2003 when Wilkinson stunned
the world and released the
Quattro which has 4
blades, beating Moorse's Law by almost a decade. Bite that, Gordon!
Amazingly, the world has not caught on. However, the www.wilkinson-quattro.com" web site should go
a long way to fix that. It is so impressive, you'd think they're annoucing
a cure for world hunger, cancer, and AIDS, all in one pill.
Here's a chart of the shaving progress:
Year | # of Blades |
1915 | 1 |
1971 | 2 |
1998 | 3 |  |
2003 | 4 |
And a graph:
I'm wondering if my mathematically accellerated friends could
help me produce a trend prediction of what year we could expect
100 blades. I think that would be the coolest thing ever.