Not bad.
Also:
Film colorization — invented by Wilson Markle in 1983.
Java programming language — invented by James Gosling in 1994.
56k modem — invented by Dr. Brent Townshend in 1996.
735kV power line — the international standard for long-distance electricity transmission, invented by Jean-Jacques Archambault in Quebec, where the world's first 735,000-volt line was commissioned in 1965.
AM broadcasting — invented by Reginald Fessenden in 1906.
Fathometer — an early form of sonar invented by Reginald A. Fessenden in 1919.
Pager — invented by Alfred J. Gross in 1949.
Quartz clock — built by Warren Marrison in 1927.
Standard time — introduced by Scottish-Canadian Sandford Fleming in 1878.
Telephone — invented by Alexander Graham Bell in 1876.
Undersea telegraph cable — invented by British-Canadian Fredric Newton Gisborne in 1857.
California roll — created by the Japanese-Canadian chef, Hidekazu Tojo, in the 1970s.
McIntosh Red apple — developed by John McIntosh (1811).
Poutine — created in the Centre-du-Québec region in the 1950s.
Yukon Gold potato — invented by Gary Johnston in 1966.
CADPAT digital camouflage pattern
ASDIC — invented by Robert William Boyle in 1916.
G-suit (or "anti-gravity suit") — a suit for high-altitude jet pilots invented by Wilbur R. Franks in 1941.
Defendo — a Canadian martial art
Sonar — invented by Reginald Fessenden.
Alkaline battery — invented by Lewis Urry in 1954.
Caesar (cocktail) — introduced in Calgary in 1969.
Electric cooking range — invented by Thomas Ahearn in 1882.
Green ink — invented by American Thomas Sterry Hunt in 1862 while teaching at Université Laval; used for various U.S. banknotes.
Incandescent light bulb — invented in 1874 by Henry Woodward, who sold the patent to Thomas Edison.
Jolly Jumper — a baby jumper invented by Olivia Poole in 1959.
Lawn sprinkler — invented by Elijah McCoy.
Plexiglas — made practical by William Chalmers' invention for creating methyl methacrylate, while a graduate student at McGill University in 1931.
Snow goggles — used by Inuit to prevent snow blindness in the Arctic and were made typically from ivory, bone or other materials.
The first coloured coins used in circulation
Kerosene — Discovered in the 1840s by Abraham Gesner.
CPR mannequin — invented by Dianne Croteau in 1989.
The first practical electron microscope was built by James Hillier and Arthur Prebus in 1939.
Finite element method, a method for numerically solving differential equations, invented by Alexander Hrennikoff
Forensic pathology in policing — introduced by Dr. Frances McGill (1877–1959).
NeisVac‑C — a conjugate vaccine developed in 1982 by Harold Jennings and his Ottawa-based team for immunizing against Group C meningococcal meningitis.