← Back to context Comment by iamtedd 2 days ago [flagged] 2 comments iamtedd Reply behnamoh 2 days ago Yeah, I remember smartphone companies using "one" in their product names a lot back then. Even now we have Google One, OneDrive, Apple One, etc. parpfish 2 days ago i'd be curious to see the timeline of the rise and fall of product names using "x-thousand" (e.g., "Smart Machine 3000"). It was a common enough naming convention that it was frequently parodied in the 90s, but it's gone away and i don't know when.
behnamoh 2 days ago Yeah, I remember smartphone companies using "one" in their product names a lot back then. Even now we have Google One, OneDrive, Apple One, etc. parpfish 2 days ago i'd be curious to see the timeline of the rise and fall of product names using "x-thousand" (e.g., "Smart Machine 3000"). It was a common enough naming convention that it was frequently parodied in the 90s, but it's gone away and i don't know when.
parpfish 2 days ago i'd be curious to see the timeline of the rise and fall of product names using "x-thousand" (e.g., "Smart Machine 3000"). It was a common enough naming convention that it was frequently parodied in the 90s, but it's gone away and i don't know when.
Yeah, I remember smartphone companies using "one" in their product names a lot back then. Even now we have Google One, OneDrive, Apple One, etc.
i'd be curious to see the timeline of the rise and fall of product names using "x-thousand" (e.g., "Smart Machine 3000"). It was a common enough naming convention that it was frequently parodied in the 90s, but it's gone away and i don't know when.