There are many companies / brands / products
whose names were derived from strange circumstances/things/happenings.
Mercedes
This was actually the financier's daughter's
name.
Adobe
This came from name of the river Adobe Creek
that ran behind the house of founder John Warnock.
Apple
Computers
It
was the favorite fruit of founder Steve Jobs. He was three months late
in filing a name for the business, and he threatened to call his
company
Apple
Computers if the other colleagues didn't suggest a better name by 5
O'clock that evening.
CISCO
It is not an acronym as popularly believed.
It is short for San Francisco .
Compaq
This name was formed by using COMp, for
computer, and PAQ to denote a small integral object.
Corel
The name was derived from the founder's name
Dr. Michael Cowpland. It stands for COwpland REsearchLaboratory.
Google
The
name started as a joke boasting about the amount of information the
search-engine would be able to search. It was originally named
'Googol',
a word for the number represented by 1 followed by 100 zeros. After
founders- Stanford graduate students Sergey Brin and Larry Page
presented their project to an angel investor, they received a cheque
made out to 'Google' ...thus the name.
Hotmail
Founder
Jack Smith got the idea of accessing e-mail via the web from a computer
anywhere in the world. When Sabeer Bhatia came up with the business
plan for the mail service, he tried all kinds of names ending in 'mail'
and finally settled for hotmail as it included the letters "html" - the
programming language used to write web pages. It was initially referred
to as HoTMaiL with selective uppercasing.
Hewlett
Packard
Bill
Hewlett and Dave Packard tossed a coin to decide whether the company
they founded would be called Hewlett-Packard or Packard-Hewlett.
Intel
Bob
Noyce and Gordon Moore wanted to name their new company ' Moore
Noyce'but that was already trademarked by a hotel chain so they had to
settle for an acronym of INTegrated ELectronics.
Lotus
(Notes)
Mitch
Kapor got the name for his company from 'The Lotus Position' or
'Padmasana'. Kapoor used to be a teacher of Transcendental Meditation
of
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi.
Microsoft
Coined
by Bill Gates to represent the company that was devoted to
MICROcomputer SOFTware. Originally christened Micro-Soft, the '-' was
removed later on.
Motorola
Founder
Paul Galvin came up with this name when his company started
manufacturing radios for cars. The popular radio company at the time
was
called Victrola.
ORACLE
Larry
Ellison and Bob Oats were working on a consulting project for the CIA
(Central Intelligence Agency). The code name for the project was called
Oracle
(the CIA saw this as the system to give answers to all questions or
something such). The project was designed to help use the newly written
SQL code by IBM. The project eventually was terminated but Larry and
Bob
decided to finish what they started and bring it to the world. They
kept the name Oracle and created the RDBMS engine. Later they kept the
same name for the company.
Sony
It originated from the Latin word 'sonus'
meaning sound, and 'sonny' a slang used by Americans to refer to a
bright youngster.
SUN
Founded
by 4 Stanford University buddies, SUN is the acronym for Stanford
University Network. Andreas Bechtolsheim built a microcomputer; Vinod
Khosla recruited him and Scott McNealy to manufacture computers based
on
it, and Bill Joy to develop a UNIX-based OS for the computer.
Yahoo!
The
word was invented by Jonathan Swift and used in his book 'Gulliver's
Travels'. It represents a person who is repulsive in appearance and
action and is
barely human. Yahoo! Founders Jerry Yang and David Filo selected the
name because they considered themselves yahoos.