'Motorola Inc.' () is an
American multinational communications
company based in
Schaumburg, Illinois, a
Chicago suburb.
History
Motorola started as Galvin Manufacturing Corporation in
1928. The name Motorola was adopted in
1947, but the word had been used as a
trademark since the
1930s. Founders
Paul Galvin and Joe Galvin came up with the name ''Motorola'' when their company started manufacturing
car radios. A number of early companies making
phonographs,
radios, and other
audio equipment in the early
20th century used the
suffix "-ola," the most famous being
Victrola;
RCA made a "radiola"; there was also a company that made jukeboxes called
Rock-Ola, and a
film editing
device called a
Moviola. The Motorola
prefix "motor-" was chosen because the company's initial focus was in
automotive electronics.
Many of Motorola's products have been
radio-related, starting with a
battery eliminator for radios, through the first
walkie-talkie in the
world,
defense electronics,
cellular infrastructure equipment, and
mobile phone manufacturing. The company was also strong in
semiconductor technology, including
integrated circuits used in
computers. Motorola has been the main supplier for the
microprocessors used in
Commodore Amiga,
Apple Macintosh and
Power Macintosh personal computers. The
chip used in the latter computers, the
PowerPC family, was developed with
IBM and in a partnership with Apple (known as the
AIM alliance). Motorola also has a diverse line of communication products, including
satellite systems,
digital cable boxes and
modems.
Quality systems
The
Six Sigma quality system was developed at Motorola even though it became best known through its use by
General Electric. It was created by engineer
Bill Smith, under the direction of
Bob Galvin (son of founder Paul Galvin) when he was running the company.
Motorola University is one of many places that provide Six Sigma training.
Ratings from interest groups
Motorola received a 100% rating on the
Corporate Equality Index released by the
Human Rights Campaign in
2004[1],
2005 [2] and
2006[3]
, starting in the third year of the report.
Trivia
★ Motorola was generally known as ''Ma Batwings'' to the radio industry, a not-necessarily-complimentary reference to the ''
Ma Bell'' moniker of the
Bell System. In each case, the nickname refers to the dominant position in their respective industries.
★ Motorola pioneered the use of sub-audible tones (trademarked as ''Private Line'' by Motorola) to control radio equipment. The most common use of these tones is to open the
squelch of radios when a certain tone is received, so that users don't have to listen to all of the traffic on their frequency, listening for their own
callsign. The most popular use of "subaud" tones in ham radio is to close retransmission systems to any radio not sending the appropriate tone.
★ Motorola commercial, military and public safety radio equipment uses microphones and speakers of
impedance values different than the products of nearly all other manufacturers, as a means of discouraging third-party manufacturers of earplugs, remote microphones, etc.
★ Many ham radio mountaintop
repeater systems operate Motorola radios which have been in 24-hour-per-day service, 7 days per week, since the 1960s.
★ In the 1970s, at the height of the
Quadraphonic audio boom, Motorola manufactured chipsets and semiconductors for Demodulators and Decoders in home audio receivers, by a variety of different audio manufacturers.
See also
★
List of Motorola products
References
External links
★
Motorola official website
★
Motorola stock performance chart