| gilded_lil18:16 UTC21 Oct 2012 | kan anyone kontribute any further 'fruity' brand names to the ones below:
Apple, Orange, Blackberry
is it just koincidence that names of fruits are chosen for technologikal brands?
I also wondered about the kar brand mercedes, which supposedly is German, however the word Mercedes sounds distinktly spanish or at least un-german to me.
many thanks in advance for any kontributions.
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| northamerican01:35 UTC22 Oct 2012 | I thought that the auto name Mercedes was from the name of a founder's daughter, but I could easily be wrong.
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| northamerican01:40 UTC22 Oct 2012 | I just looked it up. Originally, only a new engine was named for her, but then the cars, too: Mercedes.
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| gilded_lil03:19 UTC22 Oct 2012 | thank you NorthAmerican
also that should be 'fruity bRand names', not 'band names' - sorry about the konfusing typo...
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| sampan05:50 UTC22 Oct 2012 | mango for fashion and a south aftrican budget airline....
(and op has this for mazgringo....lol)
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| viaggero09:25 UTC22 Oct 2012 | Banana Republic is a clothing line/store.
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| crazyeddie11:42 UTC22 Oct 2012 | Apricot (computers, 1980s)
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| gor14:12 UTC22 Oct 2012 | yabloko (apple) Russian political party.
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| anillos_de_saturno22:19 UTC23 Oct 2012 | Peach (a Japanese airline). I don't know if the name is due to the fruit though.
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| bp00716:13 UTC26 Oct 2012 | Pears - Soap Brand Mandarin Airlines - Taipei Mandarin - Oriental Hotel Group Kiwi - Scandinavian clothing retailer
Then you've got some generic fruity stuff:
Banana Boat - Aussie sunscreen Applebees - American restaurant chain Fruit of the Loom - Underwear Juicy Fruit - Chewing gum
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| txemi23:17 UTC09 Dec 2012 | Actually, Mercedes was not the name of the daughter of the founder, Gottlieb Daimler, but the nickname given to the daughter of his business partner and associate, the Austrian engineeer Emil Jelinek. He convinced Daimler to call the models Mercedes with the reasoning that with such a name they will be easier to sell in southern Europe (France, Spain, Italy, etc...) The name of the company was kept as Daimler and the names of the cars as Mercedes. When his company merged with the company of another engineer, Karl Benz, the company was called, Daimler-Benz and the models Mercedes-Benz. As for Apple, it was an homage of the late Steve Jobs, to Alan Turing, the english mathematician, considered the father of modern computing who himself was a great fan of the Walt Disney cartoon "Snowwhite" and commited suicide 50 years ago by biting an apple he had previously injected with poison, probably following a depression due to the establishment and society pressure because of his open homosexuality. That is the reason why the apple looks bitten on one side. A sad story from a time fortunately gone away, at least in developed countries. As for Orange or Blackberry, I guess thir are just a creature of marketing and not a tribute from one genius to another, as in the case of Jobs and Turing, or to his daughter, as in the case of Emil and Mercedes Jelinek
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| count_zero07:42 UTC10 Dec 2012 | Bananarama Neneh Cherry The Village People were also a pretty fruity band
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| bp00704:02 UTC11 Dec 2012 | Thanks txemi, that explanation of apple was fascinating.
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| txemi16:33 UTC11 Dec 2012 | You are welcome, this year it was the 50th anyversary of Turing´s suicide so it was explained in many places, coinciding with Jobs´own demise. I am glad I was helpful
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| nutraxfornerves17:37 UTC11 Dec 2012 | The Apple logo story is an urban legend.
Interview with Rob Janoff, designer of the Apple logo >So, I heard one of the legends being that the colored logo was an homage to [Turing]. People think I did the colored stripes because of the gay flag. And, that was something really thought for a long time. The other really cool part was that apparently he killed himself with a cyanide laced apple. And, then I found out Alan Turing's favorite childhood story was Snow White where she falls asleep forever for eating a poisoned apple to be woken up by the handsome prince. Anyway, when I explain the real reason why I did the bite it's kind of a let down. But I'll tell you. I designed it with a bite for scale, so people get that it was an apple not a cherry. Also it was kind of iconic about taking a bite out of an apple. Something that everyone can experience. It goes across cultures. If anybody ever had an apple he probably bitten into it and that's what you get. It was after I designed it, that my creative director told me: "Well you know, there is a computer term called byte". And I was like: "You're kidding!" So, it was like perfect, but it was coincidental that it was also a computer term. At the time I had to be told everything about basic computer terms.
From Wikipedia >The logo of Apple Computer is often erroneously referred to as a tribute to Alan Turing, with the bite mark a reference to his method of suicide. Both the designer of the logo and the company deny that there is any homage to Turing in the design of the logo. Stephen Fry has recounted asking Steve Jobs whether the design was intentional, saying that Jobs' response was, "God, we wish it were."
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| txemi18:23 UTC11 Dec 2012 | Interesting, it teaches you a lesson about not believing all that you read in the press. Anyway, as the italians say: Si non e vero e ben travato :-)
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| rayccroc14:49 UTC12 Dec 2012 | Nobody mentioned the Nissan Cherry?
Can we include the Mandarin hotel chain?
Then I think there are brands of clothing, cookware and phone network called Papaya.
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| txemi16:15 UTC12 Dec 2012 | I guess the Mandarin hotel chain refers more to the chinese ruling elite than the fruits, but it is the same word nevertheless.
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