LAST MONTH, I found myself reading a short stack of those newfangled rah-rah business magazines.
One of the things that struck me was all the weird, weird names companies are giving themselves (or hiring image-consultants to give them).
I mean, it’s one thing to take an ordinary English-language word or phrase, stick an “E-” at the front and/or a “.com” at the end, and boast about how innovative and outside-the-proverbial-box you are. It’s something else again to come up with a grouping of vowels and consonants that means absolutely nothing except what your ad budget can make it mean.
Such made-up corporate monikers have come a long way since George Eastman thought up “Kodak” simply because he thought the “k” or hard “c” consonant was snappy, or since Standard Oil of New Jersey picked “Exxon” from a list of random letter-collections spun out of a mainframe computer. Now we’ve got whole companies that do nothing but find names for other companies.
Herewith, some of the goofiest and/or cleverest nonsense names seen in hi-tech magazine ads this past month:
- “Baldhead.”
- “WLion.”
- “Radware.”
- “Agilent.”
- “Yantra.”
- “Talisma.”
- “Symix.”
- “Naviant.”
- “Centra.”
- “Cysive.”
- “Genesys.”
- “Moai.”
- “Globix.”
- “Ministrel.”
- “Commtouch.”
- “NaviSite.”
- “Digex.”
- “PaylinX.”
- “Vstream.”
- “Pandesic.”
- “Prominet.”
- “Alteon.”
- “Vixel.”
- “NVST.com.”
- “Flooz.”
- “RareMedium.”
- “Aquent.”
- “Xircom.”
- “vJungle.”
- “SonoSite.”
- “Icos.”
- “Penton.”
- “Vodafone.”
- “Amsurg.”
- “Akamai.”
- “Allaire.”
- “Pervado.”
- “Sentillion.”
- “Syncronex.”
- “Sequenom.”
- “Informix.”
- “Iridium.”
- “Zyan.”
- “Getronix.”
- “Ciena.”
- “Impath.”
- “Cendant.”
- “Premera.”
- “Conexant.”
- “Avista.”
- “Cinergi.”
- “Cotelligent.”
- “Eritech.”
- “Aspyr.”
- “Firaxis.”
- “Formac.”
- “Yoeric.”
- “Trexar.”
- “Adaptec.”
- “Inspiron.”
- “Bizzed.com.”
Now: Write a sentence using all of these.
TOMORROW: Putting gentrified uses into old buildings–slightly better than just razing ’em.
ELSEWHERE:
- A website half-owned by the Must See TV people believes it’s now OK to praise popular culture, especially big-studio movies and big-network TV shows. The piece’s writer thinks she’s making a shocking, daring statement somehow….
- “I hate it when my husband chews on ice cubes….”