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Some useless trivia I find of interest. Here are some of their stories...
AMAZON:
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Originally, it was an online bookstore called Cadabra.
As Brad Stone writes in his 2013 best seller, "The Everything Store," "Cadabra" was intended as a reference to the word "abracadabra" (as in, magic) back in July 1994. He writes that CEO Jeff Bezos' first lawyer pointed out that the reference was too obscure. Plus, when you were on the phone, people sometimes heard "Cadaver" instead.
So, Bezos and his then-wife, MacKenzie Tuttle, started exploring other possibilities. They registered the domain names Awake.com, Browse.com, and Bookmall.com. They also registered the domain name Relentless.com and kept it. (if you type that into your browser today, you'll be redirected to Amazon.com)
Bezos then started paging through the "A" section of the dictionary. At the time, website listings were alphabetized, so he wanted a word that started with "A." When he landed on the word "Amazon," the name of the largest river on the planet, he decided that was the perfect name for what would become earth's largest bookstore. The new URL was registered on November 1, 1994.
Jeff Bezos at his office desk in 1999. The desk was made out of an old door (stolen from Freija's workshop?)
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Door desk: "It's a symbol."
Android:
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Android is based on co-founder Andy Rubin’s nickname. He previously worked at Apple and in 1989, co-workers there had given him the name based on his love of robots. Android dot com was his personal website until 2008. Fired from Google in 2014 for sexual misconduct and paid a $90 million severance package to expedite the process. Nice work.
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Google:
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Initially called BackRub because the system checked back-links to estimate the importance of a site..."Googolplex" was suggested as a new name for the search engine. Larry Page countered with "Googol." When they checked to see if the googol domain name was taken...they typed in google by mistake. But, Page liked that even better.
Google origin
iPhone: 2007
Steve Jobs explained the "i" when the iMac launched in 1998. Aside from internet, it represented: individual, instruct, inform, inspire. But several names were reportedly considered for the iPhone, including:
Telepod, Mobi, Tripod...even iPad.
Band-Aid:
The Band-Aid was invented in 1920 by a Johnson & Johnson employee, Earle Dickson, in Highland Park, New Jersey, for his wife Josephine, who frequently cut and burned herself while cooking. Dickson was a cotton buyer for J&J who made large cotton bandages. But Dickson’s wife needed something smaller that was easier to use. So he pitched Band-Aid’s. The word combines "bandage" and "first-aid."
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Quote:Back in 1920, this newlywed was living in New Brunswick, New Jersey, with her husband Earle, and though married life agreed with her, housekeeping did not. Not that she didn't try. When Earle came home from his job as a cotton buyer at Johnson & Johnson, Josephine would always have dinner on the table. Unfortunately, she'd also have several cuts or burns on her fingers. Without an adhesive bandage, Josephine had no easy way of bandaging her own cuts. Earle had to cut pieces of adhesive tape and cotton gauze and make a bandage for each wound. This happened day after day-and, day after day Josephine needed more bandages. They were in a real bind.
Finally, after several weeks of kitchen accidents, Earle hit upon an idea. (Luckily for Johnson & Johnson, his idea was not to go out and hire a cook.) No, Earle sat down and prepared some ready-made bandages by placing squares of cotton gauze at intervals along an adhesive strip and covering them with crinoline. Now all Josephine had to do was cut off a length of the strip and wrap it over her cut. In a way, it was a mother who was responsible for the invention of the BAND-AID Brand Adhesive Bandage.
BAND-AID Brand Adhesive Bandages Beginnings
In 2000, The one-billionth BAND-AID was produced. In 2021, BAND-AID introduced OURTONE™ bandages, designed to better blend with brown skin tones and remove the pesky racial whiteness.
BAND-AID Brand: A History Timeline
Corolla:
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It links to the Toyota Crown, one of Toyota’s longest-running products. In latin, Corolla means “little crown.” A corolla is also the ring of petals around the central part of a flower.
LEGO:
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The history of Lego began in 1932, when Ole Kirk Christiansen founded the company in a Danish carpentry workshop. It’s an abbreviation of two Danish words.
In 1934, Christiansen held a contest among his staff to name the company, offering a bottle of homemade wine as a prize. Christiansen was considering two names himself, "Legio" (with the implication of a "Legion of toys") and "Lego," a self-made contraction from the Danish phrase leg godt, meaning "play well." Later the Lego Group discovered that "Lego" could be loosely interpreted as "I put together" or "I assemble" in Latin. Christiansen selected Lego, and the company began using it on its products.
Kleenex:
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Kleenex began during the World War I when the Cellucotton company developed a crepe paper gas mask filter. In the 1920s, the product was modified into the menstrual pad Kotex. A further modification of the original crepe paper made it thinner and softer, and the resultant 1924 product was called "Kleenex" and marketed as a makeup remover. That’s the "Kleen" part of the name. The "ex" linked it to Kotex products. Kimberly-Clark Corp. created both brands. In 1925, the first Kleenex tissue ad was used in magazines showing "the new secret of keeping a pretty skin as used by famous movie stars."
The original Kleenex trademark was filed in the class of Medical, Beauty, & Agricultural Services by Cellucotton Products Company of Neenah, Wisconsin, on Saturday July 12, 1924.
The Kleenex Brand Story
"It is hard to imagine a more stupid or more dangerous way of making decisions than by putting those decisions in the hands of people who pay no price for being wrong." – Thomas Sowell