The Australian-developed Fluicer, is a flat juicer that squeezes fruits from the inside and out, with a guarantee to keep the seeds out.
Developed by Brisbane company Dreamfarm, it made TIME Magazine's best inventions of 2023 list this year.
The Fluicer had already won several prestigious design awards before a recommendation from talk show host Oprah Winfrey earlier this year catapulted it to world attention.
Queensland technology company Axiom Holographics designed a world first Hologram Zoo that enables wildlife enthusiasts to see virtual animals without venturing out of Brisbane.
They act alive but are made out of laser light, allowing you to put your hand through them.
It earned a place on TIME Magazine's best inventions of 2023 list.
Renowned Australian burns specialist Fiona Wood invented a ground-breaking spray-on skin treatment in the late 1990s.
Her ReCell spray-on skin treatment involves using a patient's own cells in a regenerative process, eliminating tissue rejection, speeding up healing, minimising scars and reintroducing pigmentation to the skin.
The therapy helped many of the 2002 Bali bombing survivors.
Scottish-born Australian James Harrison was the first to invent and patent a mechanical system to create ice for refrigeration.
Harrison created a commercial ice-making machine in Geelong, Victoria, which he then expanded to create a vapour-compression refrigeration system, which he was awarded a patent for in 1855.
His method of refrigeration is still used by fridges today, although the process has been refined significantly.
The work of Sydney engineer John O'Sullivan and his CSIRO colleagues, led to the invention of wireless internet.
Their groundbreaking work in radio astronomy led to a successful solution to the problem of how to move large quantities of data around indoors.
It ushered in the age of high-speed, 24-hour wireless connectivity we enjoy today.
Former Aussie ironman and surf club stalwart John Holt was the brainchild of an iconic invention used every week during summer.
After watching a generation of children struggle to paddle on boards, Holt designed his own board for kids to paddle on.
Today, it's the standard Nipper race board used across the country.
Australian teenager Angelina Arora was so shocked by mounting plastic waste in 2017 she decided to do something to tackle the problem.
She came up with a biodegradable form of plastic made from discarded fish waste.
It is strong, light and degrades completely without leaving any waste.
Irish-born Australian inventor Louis Brennan patented a torpedo design in 1877.
Although it came after other designs of guided torpedoes, Brennan's invention was was much simpler in its concept and worked over an acceptable range at a satisfactory speed.
Since then torpedoes have remained a frontline weapon of navies across the world.
The Australian-developed Polilight was a game changer for modern policing and helped solve countless crimes around the world.
Developed by the Australian Federal Police in the 1980s, it enables forensic scientists to detect otherwise invisible fingerprints, bodily fluids, blood stains and revealing document forgeries.
Today, the Polilight, or a variation of it, is used in 98 per cent of crime scene investigations.
It was widely popularised on fictional crime TV shows such as C.S.I.
Australian John Grant revolutionised air travel safety with his inflatable escape slide.
Grant developed his escape slide concept during the 1960s while working as a Qantas safety operations safety superintendent.
His inflatable slide could be launched during an emergency landing on water, enabling people to slide down and float away from the plane unharmed.
Since it was adopted by major airlines in the mid 1960s, the device has helped save the lives of hundreds of people.
READ MORE: Unsung Aussie who made air travel safer for millions
Australian Nobel Prize winner Howard Florey did not discover penicillin, but he was the first to develop the mould into a medically usable form.
It is estimated his discoveries have saved more than 82 million lives.
Florey's face appeared on the old $50 note.
In 1926, Australian doctor Mark Lidwell and physicist Edgar Booth developed an early portable pacemaker which in 1928 was used to revive a stillborn baby at Crown Street Women’s Hospital in Sydney.
The invention paved the way for more advanced pacemakers that saved countless lives.
Lance Hill's clothes hoist became a symbol of Australian domestic life in the 1950s but he did not invent it.
Hill's design was based on a similar device patented by Adelaide man Gilbert Toyne in 1926.
Hill's first batch of hoists was made with tubing salvaged from the frame of the underwater boom that had hung under the Sydney Harbour Bridge to catch enemy submarines during World War II.
He designed a cast aluminium winding gear to hoist the line up into the breeze - and the Hill's hoist was born.
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The revolutionary navigation tool Google Maps was created by two Danish-born developers based in Sydney.
Brothers Lars and Jens Rasmussen co-founded a startup company in early 2003 called Where 2 Technologies.
A year later, they sold that company to tech giant Google, which would later turn it into Google Maps.
READ MORE: Google parent company Alphabet earnt $29 billion in just three months
While British statesman Winston Churchill has been credited with championing the development of the tank, a little-known Australian inventor came up with the idea.
From 1912, Adelaide-born Lancelot Eldin de Mole sent sketches of a tracked armoured vehicle to British military chiefs but was knocked back by them.
It wasn't until 1916 until the British army launched a tank, based on de Mole's design.
A later royal commission credited de Mole's blueprints, but his role was never officially recognised.
READ MORE: WWII medals found hidden in garage sale furniture
Famously worn by Aussie cricket players, the white cream was first invented by the Adelaide pharmaceutical company Fauldings in 1940.
The popular sun cream product was made from zinc oxide. Initially sold in just a white colour it evolved into brighter colours and became a hit with children.
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Built and tested in 1961, the first ultrasound scanner was invented by Australian-based scientists David Robinson and George Kossoff.
The device works by sending soundwaves into the body and receiving its own echoes back again, producing an image of everything beneath the skin.
Similar technologies existed at the time, but the images captured by Robinson and Kossoff's version were superior.
It's been long scorned by wine aficionados, but the invention of boxed wine was big news back in the 1960s.
It was invented by South Australian winemaker Thomas Angove, who patented his design in 1965.
His invention consisted of a polyethylene bag that was packaged in a corrugated box. To open it, customers snipped a corner of the bag, before they sealed it with a special peg after drinking.
The cochlear inplant, or bionic ear, was developed by University of Melbourne Professor Graeme Clark.
The implant stimulates the hearing nerve and provides sound signals directly to the brain
The device was first approved for use in the US in 1985 and has been implanted in more than 100,000 people around the world.
The iconic Aussie spread Vegemite was invented in Melbourne in 1923 as an alternative to British Marmite.
This spread made from brewer's yeast became a distinctively 'Australian food' despite being owned by an American company for several decades.
In the 1950s, Vegemite represented Australian vitality and innocence. Today it provides a nostalgic link to seemingly simpler times.
Scottish engineer Arthur James Arnot who migrated to Melbourne patented the electric drill in 1889.
Mr Arnot's drill was much larger and heavier than the ones loved by DIY enthusiasts because it was designed for drilling through thick rock and coal.
But his invention paved the way for other electrical tools during the early 20th century.