After all, we all know that Hedy Lamarr invented WIFI.
We can joke about Wi-Fi, but in fairness she did invent the idea of frequency hopping spread spectrum as a means of avoiding both jamming and interception.
Her male friend in America was a musician, and her insight occurred when she was watching a player piano (pianola). She saw the patterns on the paper reel as it rolled upwards, observing that the horizontal position of the holes represented the frequency of the played note. Her inventive leap was realising that the notes could represent radio frequencies rather than sound frequencies, and that all it would need is for the receiver to have the same paper reel, synchronised, such that the transmitter and receiver would both be tuned to the same frequency at the same time. The "tune" could be random and never repeating, making it impossible to predict.
She was obviously extremely smart, but also perhaps her mind was already prepared because her husband in Austria headed an armaments factory. Also, at the time it was difficult for a woman to be recognised as intellectually equipped to come up with inventions like this, so at first it was assumed her friend should take most of the credit. Later, she did get a patent with her name on it. It was probably fair to recognise both of them as co-inventors.