No. Most new inventions are patented, and all should be, but not all inventions are profitable or safe for release to the public. In addition, patented inventions may never actually be constructed, just sufficiently described. Even if a patented item is produced it may not be mass produced. While most trinkets and machinery are most profitably made through mass production, this is not true of all of the world's products. Highly specialized or expensive machinery, and top tier military missiles and vehicles, cannot be profitably mass produced, as they are either purchased very infrequently, with only a handful of sales a year, or they must be customized extensively to fit customer's orders.
about APRIL MAY 2005
of course almost everything is mass production, certainly all electronics are mass produced or created individually from mass produced items. They system is designed so that even products that are produced to a individuals unique design choices are still mass produced. When a car or a computer is purchased you can choose the options you desire and have the item mass produced just for you. Xbox 360 on the other hand are mass produced in models for regional areas and with certain limited options or bundles
to make sure the product is safe and does do everything it is supposed to do, before it gets marketed.
Only if the marketplace demands it. Like everything else, "Supply and Demand."
Mass produced foods are foods that are produced by the thousands.
Since foood, materials and tools weren't mass produced, everything was relitavely expensive for the consumers.
It was the frist mass produced car and produced specifically for the masses Henry Ford done everything to ensure that this car was affordable for the average person.
Almost everything that is mass produced uses genetically modified ingredients to save money.
gears are best produced in mass production by
A market for mass-produced goods
Mass is everything, humans, animals, plants, everything on earth, or you could say Mass is everything in the universe that has protons and nuetrons.
The first mass-produced mechanical calculator was made by Charles Xavier Thomas, around 1920. The first mass-produced electronic calculator was probably the Sharp QT-8D, mass-produced in 1969.