Through potato chips, humans have found some wonderful fat substitutes that can eat as many snacks as possible without increasing their weight. Recently, Proctor & Gamble developed Olestra (Sucrose Polyester) which is a zero calorie fat substitute at 200 million dollars. This product has been approved by the Federal Drug Administration (FDA) with a warning label. What is Olestra? Orestra molecules differ from fat molecules in that they have 6 to 8 fatty acids on the sucrose core, rather than on 3 glycerol cores.
When Steven Dufresne encountered Potato Semiconductor (chip maker), he had to build a project on a potato chip. For his on-chip project he decided to use a simple 555 timer circuit with a piezoelectric buzzer connected to the photo register. But the first step is to convert potato chips to executable structural parts. To achieve this goal, he covered potato chips with multilayer epoxy (if you want to know a classic old classical layer). This gives enough power to support the components he needs to install on it. Because Steven needs to make sure that the chip itself is not conductive, the use of Classic Lays is also not a completely random choice (it can be a salty chip).
William Tappendon produced and sold these chips in Cleveland, Ohio in 1895. In the 1920 's, salesman Herman Lay sold potato chips in the southern part of the United States (selling potato chips from the trunk of the car). In 1926, Laura Scudder (owned at a potato chip factory in Monterey, California, California) invented a wax potato chip bag to make potato chips popular, to crisp and crisp chips.
It seems to be very logical today. Potato chips are clogged. But for decades people were eating potato chips from baskets, buckets or bottles. And it is very helpful for everyone. It was possible to advertise them on a commercial scale until Laura Clough Scudder introduced the idea of putting the chip in the bag. According to Chips & Crisps, Scudder's biggest concern is to make her tips fresher. She entrusted the staff with hours of holiday time, handed out a piece of wax paper to them, asked them to iron them together at night and ask them to make bags to fill the next day. Her company was founded in 1926 and these bags were the first things she added to potato chips processing. Sounds good.