Why is bluetooth named bluetooth




















Nooks and crannies. Semantic enigmas. The body beautiful. Red tape, white lies. Speculative science. This sceptred isle. Root of all evil. Ethical conundrums. This sporting life. Stage and screen. Birds and the bees. The Man Behind the Tooth. So what does it mean? Code for Collaboration. In , three industry leaders, Intel, Ericsson, and Nokia, met to plan the standardization of this short-range radio technology to support connectivity and collaboration between different products and industries.

During this meeting, Jim Kardach from Intel suggested Bluetooth as a temporary code name. Bluetooth was only intended as a placeholder until marketing could come up with something really cool. The One and Only. PAN was the front runner, but an exhaustive search discovered it already had tens of thousands of hits throughout the internet.

The name caught on fast and before it could be changed, it spread throughout the industry, becoming synonymous with short-range wireless technology. Skip to content. About Us Origin of the Bluetooth Name. We all do it: We use the awesome power of Google to correct our common misspellings. Cofounder, and current sad CEO Larry Page decided that it would be the perfect name for his new company as it reflected the nearly unimaginable vastness the Web.

According to him, because it referred to the biggest river in the world. The biggest by a long shot. On a tangential note: Take a look at the subliminal messaging in the current Amazon logo, which features a slightly askew smirk beneath the Amazon name. Etsy is the multi-million-dollar virtual marketplace for occasionally insane homespun crafts.

Launched in , the company came about at a time when natural language URLs were already in short supply. In Italian, you say etsi a lot. Try as Kalin might to justify it, Etsy still means nothing. But few American children who spent the late s addicted to goomba-stomping were aware that the Kyoto-based Nintendo Corporation had been in existence for more than a century.

Nintendo traces its roots back to , when the company produced hand-made playing cards painted on mulberry tree bark and used in a game known as Hanafuda. So how did playing cards eventually lead to Mario Kart? After trying its hand excuse the pun at numerous endeavors over the next century, the company eventually found its way into the toy industry, which by the s was a natural jumping-off point into the burgeoning video game market.

The Nokia brand may soon go away following an all-but-final acquisition by Microsoft , but the Finnish company can claim a history that reaches back nearly years. Nokia began its existence far from the world of mobile technology—as a paper mill.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000