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KF5JRV > TODAY    06.04.26 11:33l 34 Lines 2091 Bytes #57 (0) @ WW
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Subj: Today in History - Apr 06
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On April 6, 1980, 3M begins sales of Post-it Notes. The canary yellow sticky pads quickly become one of the best-selling office
 supply products in history and a ubiquitous staple in schools and offices around the world.

No, Post-it Notes were not invented by the title characters in Romy and Micheleâ€Ös High School Reunion, but by 3M scientists S
pencer Silver and Arthur Fry. In 1968, Silver was working as a 3M research chemist when he developed an unusual adhesive made o
f tiny acrylic spheresâ€östicky enough to hold papers together, but weak enough to peel away cleanly and be reused. Because the
 microspheres touched surfaces at only a few points, the adhesive retained its tack even after repeated use.

For years, 3M struggled to find a practical consumer use. A prototype bulletin board coated with the adhesive failed when dust 
and dirt reduced its sticking power. Silverâ€Ös creation remained a solution in search of a problemâ€öuntil Fry, a 3M product d
evelopment specialist, found one.

While singing in his church choir, Fry grew frustrated when the paper bookmarks he used kept slipping out of his hymnal. Recall
ing Silverâ€Ös adhesive from a company seminar, he realized it could anchor a bookmark without damaging the page. Soon, colleag
ues began using the sticky slips to write notes and reminders, revealing a far broader use. “I thought what we have here isnâ
€Öt just a bookmark,” Fry later said. “Itâ€Ös a whole new way to communicate.”

After test-marketing the product as “Press â€Ön Peel” in four cities in 1977, 3M rebranded and launched “Post-it Notes”
 nationwide three years later. They quickly caught on. “It was always a self-advertising product,” Fry said. People “woul
d look at it, peel it off and play with it, and then go out and buy a pad for themselves.”

Today, Post-it Notes remain one of 3Mâ€Ös most recognizable products. For their sticky creation, Fry and Silver were inducted i
nto the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 2010.




73 de Scott KF5JRV

Pmail: KF5JRV@KF5JRV.#NWAR.AR.USA.NA
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