Etymologies of some famous tech names

This was pretty interesting. For example, in connection with the Nintendo entry I learned that Yakuza, the Japanese mafia, translates as 8-9-3, a losing hand in a blackjack like card game.

Here is part of the entry for ‘bluetooth.’

“Taser” comes from fiction: Thomas A. Swift’s Electric Rifle.

For which they had to “invent” his middle initial. Tom Swift had no middle name.

TWAIN, the scanning API, is an acronym for Technology Without An Interesting Name.

This is commonly disputed, but I happen to have been involved with its inception. At the time a bunch of sticks-in-the-mud reviewing the SDK tried to explain that it referred to the line from Kipling, but once the acronym was suggested that was pretty much it.

Hadoopwas named after the inventor’s son’s stuffed elephant.

The UNIX mail program ‘biff’ was named after a dog.

In 1819 Baron Charles Cagniard de la Tour turned to Greek mythology when he invented a noise-making device. Per Wikipedia:

“De la Tour’s siren could produce sound under water, suggesting a link with the sirens of Greek mythology; hence the name of the instrument.”

Anyone remember Sun Microsystems? That was an acronym for Stanford University Network.

The early days of Internet protocols had a lot of this. “Archie,” the first search protocol, was coined from the word “Archive,” but later protocols were “Jughead” and “Veronica.”

There was also “Gopher,” which supposedly was coined because it would “Go for” the files. The fact that it was developed at the University of Minnesota – whose sports teams were the Gophers – was not just coincidental.

Remember it? I worked there for three years…

I apparently have a history of working for tech companies that dwindle and are forgotten…or at least given up for dead.

When I worked at Sun, I used ELM (ELectronic Mail) as an e-mail client. Other people used PINE (Pine Is Not Elm).

There’s an old joke that you might be a nerd if… you name your three daughters Eudora, Veronica, and Mozilla.

There was a running joke that PCMCIA actually stood for “People Can’t Memorize Computer Industry Acronyms”

I was in love with Eudora. The original Eudora. Not whatever mutant clone they eventually came up with. After I had to give her up I despaired and drifted off into the wasteland know as webmail.

Ha! I used elm at Sun too - what a barrel o’ fun that was.

Cisco bought TGV back in 1996, which is a shame because TGV stood for Two Guys and a Vax.

Regarding TGV, I heard that once they had grown beyond the original two guys and had more computers, the “TGV” stood for “Those Guys and Vaxen”.

Sony was at least in part named for “sonny boy”. Here is a quote from Wikipedia:

I learned the otherday that the “gnu” in the open source graphing program “gnuplot” doesn’t come from Richard Stallman’s open source project. The authors weren’t aware of Stallman at the time they chose the name, and the name of the plotting program was just supposed to be a pun on the name of another program: “new-plot”.

Kind of an odd coincidence.