Wednesday, November 01, 2006

It's in the Name


Hey people,
Here's an interesting e-mail I got about how some companies got their names.

Pepsi: Pepsi was named after dyspepsia (indigestion), which it was originally promoted to help relieve.


Apple Computers: Founder Steve Jobs named the company after his favorite fruit -- apples -- and possibly for the time he worked in an apple orchard. The name was reportedly decided while he was down to the wire and three months late in filing a name for the company.
Frisbee: Named for the Frisbie Baking Company, whose pie plates were the first version of the now popular flying toy.

Google: Originally named Googol (1 followed by 100 zeroes) for the huge amount of information the search-engine would search. The founders then reportedly received their first funding check from an investor made out to "Google," and the name stuck.

Adidas: Named for their German maker Adolph Dassler, who was called Adi by friends. Adi, plus the first three letters of his last name, makes Adidas.

Hotmail: Hotmail was so named because it includes HTML (the language used to write Web pages), along with "mail." It originally included uppercase letters to show this: HoTMaiL.

Mars: The Mars candy company was named for Forrest Mars, the company's founder.

LEGO: The popular toys are named for the Danish phrase "leg godt," which means "play well."

Hewlett Packard: Named for founders Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard, who reportedly flipped a coin to decide whose name to list first.

Reebok: Named for a type of African gazelle, the rhebok.
Microsoft: Bill Gates came up with Microsoft for MICROcomputer SOFTware (it originally had a hyphen: Micro-Soft).

Sony: Named for "sonus," the latin word for "sound," and "sonny," the slang term referring to a bright youngster.

McDonald's: Named for Richard and Maurice McDonald, who converted their barbecue drive-in with car hops into the world's first McDonald's in 1948.

Arm & Hammer: Named for founder Armand Maccabee. Maccabee, a biblical Hebrew name, means "hammer" in English.

Atari: In Japanese, "atari" describes a position in a board game where your opponent is in danger of being captured (similar to "check" in chess).

eBay: The creator of eBay, Pierre Omidyar, had a Web consulting company called Echo Bay Technology Group.
Echobay.com was already taken when he tried to register it, so he settled on eBay.com instead.

Lotus Software: Founder Mitch Kapor was a teacher of transcendental meditation, as taught by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. He named his company for the position known as the "lotus position" or "Padmasana."

Motorola: Named when founder Paul Galvin's company started making car radios. Many audio equipment makers used the "ola" ending to convey "sound" or "motion" (like the Victrola phonograph), so motorola was born.

Nabisco: First named The National Biscuit Company, the company shortened its name to Nabisco in 1971.

Starbucks: Named after Starbuck, a character in Herman Melville's novel, "Moby Dick."

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hehehe reemo ;* loved the info, khayalhom wasse3!

Anonymous said...

Interesting Post ;-) .. really enjoyed reading it .. way To Go Girl ;-)

McReemy said...

Nadooya, this info will come in handy probably in one of your courses ;) Cookie, thnx for your comments :)

oao said...

Hey, cuz... It's been a while eh.. anyway I enjoyed reading your blog very informative ;)

McReemy said...

thanks for your comment cuz ;) I'll keep updating ;)