Jon Erlichman Profile picture
May 7 26 tweets 8 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
Sony was founded on this day in 1946.

Its first product was an electric rice cooker.

Here’s more on the journey… 🧵 Image
Sony’s first office was in a department store, which was bombed during WW2.

Aside from the rice cooker, Sony mainly focused on fixing radios. Image
Its first worldwide hit was in 1957.

A pocket sized radio…the TR-63: Image
Sony was not the original name.

It was picked to have global appeal.

It combined “sonus” and “sonny.”

“sonus” is Latin for sound.

“sonny” means little son.

The name represents a group of young people who innovate. Image
Sony then focused on televisions.

It launched a portable TV in 1960.

And it raised the bar in color TV with its Trinitron televisions. ImageImage
The video recording wars were next.

Sony’s Betamax technology was seen as better than VHS.

But there were strategic missteps.

Meanwhile, Sony was on the verge of a revolution in another area…
In 1979, the Walkman was released: Image
3,000 units sold in the first month.

2 million sold in the first 1.5 years.

400 million Walkman devices were sold over the next 30 years.
Sony would keep innovating.

Both in TV, with the launch of the Watchman pocket TV in 1982…

…and, that same year… Image
The first CD was released, based on technology Sony helped develop. Image
Sony also had a CD player to launch alongside that Billy Joel album.

Here’s a commercial from 1982:
And just two years later, Sony was pushing ahead with the Discman: Image
On the television front…

Sony coined the term “jumbotron” in 1985 to highlight its video innovation. Image
That same year, the Handycam would usher in the camcorder era: Image
Sony had wanted a film company to complement its electronics business.

So in 1989, it bought one: Image
The MiniDisc came in 1992…

…and two years later, a major contribution to the gaming world… Image
…the PlayStation, released in 1994: Image
Here’s a sound you might remember:
Sony would need to keep up in world of computers and laptops.

The Vaio brand launched in 1996. ImageImage
Note Sony had lots of ties to the computer industry before Vaio.

Its floppy disk was used with the Mac in 1984: Image
In fact, Steve Jobs was a big fan of Sony. Image
Sony was one of the first players in the consumer robot market.

Aibo was unveiled in 1999: Image
And 30 years after the Betamax battle…

…Sony would battle it out in the DVD technology wars, with Blu-Ray. Image
Arguably the biggest battle would be coming…in the phone market.

There were the early Sony Ericsson phones in 2002…

…even a Walkman phone in 2005… ImageImage
…and later, phones that would be seen as potential iPhone killers… Image
Innovation is tough. If any company knows that, it’s Sony.

It’s been at it now for 77 years. Image

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More from @JonErlichman

May 7
Iron Man 2 was released this day in 2010.

Elon makes a cameo in the film.

Here’s how it happened… 🧵
Iron Man was created in the 1960s.

Stan Lee said the character was based on Howard Hughes.

But when Iron Man came to the big screen… Image
Robert Downey Jr. was seeking inspiration for his character.

And he found it in Musk.

He wanted director Jon Favreau to meet with Musk. Image
Read 9 tweets
May 6
92 year old Warren Buffett is hosting his annual gathering in Omaha.

Berkshire Hathaway’s shareholder meeting is often called “Woodstock for Capitalists.”

But it started small.

Here’s more on the journey … 🧵 Image
Buffett first learned about Berkshire as a young investor in 1962.

It was a struggling textile mile and he felt its stock was undervalued.

By 1965, he had taken control of the company and had bigger plans.

Through Berkshire, he would buy and invest in even more businesses. Image
Berkshire relocated to Omaha and the first meeting there was in 1973.

It was in the employee cafeteria at an insurance company they owned.

A “meeting in progress” sign was on the door to keep hungry staff away.

Over the next few years, something special started to happen… Image
Read 9 tweets
Apr 30
How did these companies get their names?

Here are some of their stories… 🧵 Image
Amazon worked for a biz marketed as earth’s biggest bookstore.

The Amazon River was in the first logo.

Other names considered…

…included Relentless, a site that today takes you directly to Amazon.

And, Cadabra, which sounded too much like cadaver…
Steve Jobs in 1980 on why he named the company Apple:

“Because I like apples and because it comes ahead of Atari in the phone book...I used to work at Atari.”
Read 9 tweets
Apr 4
Microsoft was founded this day in 1975.

Here’s how it got started… 🧵
Bill Gates and Paul Allen were high school friends in Seattle.

They loved programming.

It inspired them to build a business before Microsoft.
It was called Traf-o-Data.

It analyzed traffic on the roads.

And it set the stage for an even bigger software opportunity.
Read 11 tweets
Apr 2
Would Apple buy Disney?

On Wall Street this week, that subject received some fresh attention.

Here’s more on the story… 🧵
Analyst Laura Martin suggested the two companies would be stronger together.

Apple doesn’t make big acquisitions.

But its ties to Disney run deep.
Disney’s Bob Iger is, in many ways, the connective tissue.

Early on as CEO, he mended fences with Steve Jobs and Pixar.

After the acquisition, Jobs became Disney’s largest shareholder and a board member.

Here’s Jobs on Disney (before the Pixar deal):
Read 9 tweets
Apr 1
Gmail launched on this day in 2004.

Here’s how it happened… 🧵
Paul Buchheit had wanted Google to launch a web-based email service.

He was employee 23, joining 3 months after Google had left its garage office.

Internally, some thought email might be a distraction from the search business.
A story about Google’s email plans was published right before the launch:
Read 5 tweets

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