Best-selling products in the decade you were born
Most popular consumer goods from the 2000s to the 1940s
2000s: Apple iPod
2000s: Nokia 1100
2000s: Sony PlayStation2
2000s: Toyota Camry
2000s: Garmin Nuvi 350
2000s: The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown
Easily the best-selling book of the 2000s, Dan Brown's gripping conspiracy-fiction novel hit the shelves in 2003. By 2010, over 80 million copies had been sold, beating the second best-seller of the decade, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, by a cool 15 million.
2000s: Amazon Kindle
1990s: Nokia 3210
1990s: Motorola Bravo
1990s: Tamagotchi
1990s: Ford Taurus
1990s: The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho
1990s: Sony PlayStation
1990s: Nintendo Game Boy
1980s: Sony Walkman WM-2
1980s: Ford Escort
1980s: Rubik's Cube
1980s: Cabbage Patch Kids
1980s: Commodore 64
1980s: Nintendo Entertainment System
1980s: Speak & Spell
1970s: Polaroid OneStep Land Camera
1970s: Oldsmobile Cutlass
1970s: Texas Instruments TI-30
1970s: Hot Wheels
1970s: Atari 2600
1970s: TI-500
1970s: Little Professor
1960s: Sony Trinitron
The first properly modern color TV, Sony introduced the Trinitron in 1968. An instant success, the original 12-inch model outclassed the competition in terms of picture quality and ease of use. Sony went on to sell 100 million Trinitron TVs before the brand was ditched in 2008.
1960s: Chevrolet Impala
1960s: Western Electric 500
1960s: Valley of the Dolls by Jacqueline Susann
1960s: Kodak Instamatic 104
1960s: Barbie
The most wished-for doll of the decade in the USA, Canada and Down Under, Mattel's Barbie flew off toy store shelves during the 1960s, selling in the millions. In the UK, however, the more realistic-looking Sindy doll was more popular.
1960s: Sunbeam Mixmaster
1950s: Chevrolet Bel Air
1950s: RCA Victor TV
1950s: From Here to Eternity by James Jones
1950s: Matchbox
1950s: Silly Putty
1950s: Sony TR-610
1950s: Bic Cristal
1940s: Hoover Model 27
1940s: Forever Amber by Kathleen Winsor
1940s: Sunbeam Coffeemaster
1940s: Chevrolet Fleetline Aerosedan
1940s: Zippo
1940s: Slinky
1940s: Kenmore Automatic Washer
Spelling the end for manual washing machines, the Kenmore Automatic Washer was launched in the mid-1940s at Sears, Roebuck in the US. Despite its price tag of $239.95, a hefty $3,000 (£2.3k) in today's money, it became the best-selling washing machine of the decade in North America.
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