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RCARCA, formerly an acronym and initialism for the Radio Corporation of America, is now a trademark used by two companies for products descended from that common ancestor: *Thomson Consumer electronics, which manufactures RCA-branded televisions, DVD players, video cassette recorders, direct broadcast satellite decoders, camcorders, audio equipment, telephones, and related accessories; and *Bertelsmann AG (now Sony BMG Music Entertainment), which owns the RCA Victor and RCA Records record labels. The two companies bought those assets from General Electric, which took over the RCA conglomerate in 1986 and kept RCA's NBC broadcasting interests. Although Bertelsmann AG is new to the family (it would have been more "logical" to sell the RCA music brand to EMI, which already owns the His Master's Voice AKA "RCA dog" trademark in Europe), Thomson started as the French subsidiary of a company which later evolved into General Electric. ==Prior to RCA== During World War I the patents of the major companies involved with radio in the United States of America were merged to facilitate the war effort. All production of radio equipment was for the military. The seizure of the assets of Italian-owned American Marconi by the United States Navy and the cooperation between General Electric, United Fruit and Westinghouse Electric Corporation laid the groundwork for the Radio Corporation of America, RCA. After the war, many saw radio as a natural monopoly. The United States Navy tried, but failed, to gain the monopoly for the Navy. Owen Young convinced the Congress of the United States to entrust in his company, General Electric (GE), together with American Telephone and Telegraph (AT&T), a monopoly of international radio. ==History of RCA== RCA was formed in 1919 as a publicly-held company owned in part by AT&T and GE. David Sarnoff was named General Manager. RCA's charter required it be mostly American-owned. RCA took over the assets of American Marconi, and was responsible for marketing GE and Westinghouse's radio equipment. It also acquired the patents of United Fruit and Westinghouse, in exchange for ownership stakes. By 1926, RCA had grasped the market for commercial radio, and purchased the WEAF and WCAP radio stations and network from AT&T, merged them with RCA's own attempt at networking, the WJZ New York/WRC Washington chain, and formed the National Broadcasting Company (NBC). In 1929, RCA purchased the Victor Talking Machine Company, then the world's largest manufacturer of phonographs (including the famous "Victrola") and phonograph records (in British English, "gramophone records"). The company then became RCA-Victor. With Victor, RCA acquired New World rights to the famous Nipper trademark. RCA Victor produced many radio-phonographs. The company also created new techniques for adding sound to film. In 1931, RCA Victor developed and released the first 33⅓ rpm records to the public. These had the standard groove size identical to the contemporary 78rpm records, rather than the "microgroove" used in post-WWII 33⅓ "Long Play" records. The format was a commercial failure at the height of the Great Depression, partially because the records and playback equipment were expensive. The system was withdrawn from the market after about a year. (This was not the first attempt at a commercial long play record format, as Edison Records had marketed a microgroove vertically recorded disc with 20 minutes playing time per side the previous decade; the Edison long playing records were also a commercial failure.) In 1939, RCA demonstrated the first television system at the 1939 New York World's Fair. With the introduction of the NTSC standard, the Federal Communications Commission authorized the start of commercial television transmission on July 1, 1941. World War II slowed the deployment of television in the US, but RCA began selling television sets almost immediately after the war was over. Antitrust concerns led to the breakup of the NBC radio networks by the FCC, a breakup affirmed by the United States Supreme Court. On October 12, 1943, the "NBC Blue" radio network was sold to Life Savers candy magnate Edward J. Noble for $8,000,000, and renamed "The Blue Network, Inc". It would become the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) in 1946. The "NBC Red" network retained the NBC name, and RCA retained ownership. In 1949, RCA-Victor developed and released the first 45 revolutions per minute record to the public, answering Columbia Records's 33⅓ rpm "Vinyl record". In 1953, RCA's color-TV standard was adopted as the standard for American color TV. RCA cameras and studio gear, particularly of the RCA TK-40 series, became standard equipment at many American television network affiliates. Perhaps surprisingly David Sarnoff commented in 1955, "Television will never be a medium of entertainment". ==RCA's decline== In many ways the story of RCA is the story of David Sarnoff. His drive and business acumen led to RCA becoming one of the largest companies in the world, successfully turning it into a conglomerate during the era of their success. However in 1970, now 69 years old, Sarnoff retired and was succeeded by his son Robert. David Sarnoff died the next year; much of RCA's success died with him. RCA was one of the eight major computer companies (along with IBM, Burroughs, Control Data Corporation, General Electric, Honeywell, Scientific Data Systems and UNIVAC) through most of the 1960s, but abandoned computers in 1971. RCA was a major proponent of the 8-track cartridge, which it launched in 1965. The eight-track cartridge initially had a huge and profitable impact on the consumer marketplace. However, sales of the 8-track tape format peaked in 1974-75 as consumers increasingly favored the compact cassette format. During the 1970s, RCA Corporation, as it was now formally known, became increasingly ossified as a company. Robert Sarnoff was ousted in a boardroom coup by Anthony Conrad, who then resigned after admitting failing to file income tax returns for six years. Despite maintaining a high standard of engineering excellence in such fields as broadcast engineering and satellite communications equipment, other businesses such as the NBC radio and television networks declined. Forays into new consumer electronics products, such as the innovative but technologically obsolescent SelectaVision videodisc system, proved money losers. This eventually led to RCA's sale to GE and its subsequent break-up. ==See also== *RCA Mark II Sound Synthesizer *RCA jack *Electrofax *List of record labels *Colortrak - A notable trademark for RCA's color TVs from the past ==External links== *[http://www.rca.com/ RCA (Thomson) website] *[http://rcarecords.com/ RCA Records website] *[http://rcavictor.com/ RCA Victor website] Record labels Consumer electronics Defunct companies of the United States Corporations with naming rights of stadiums RCAIt says here that RCA was put together by AT&T and United Fruit. Are you sure United Fruit was involved? Here it says that RCA 'aquired the famous trademark of the dog "Nipper" listening to "His Master's Voice.' Is this correct? Surely this remained with EMI/HMV - a British company? However, it is possible that they formed an alliance with HMV, and were then permitted to use this trademark within the USA. Can someone please clarify this? -- User:David Martland 05:55 15 Jun 2003 (UTC) The British Company HMV and the USA company Victor were both decended from companies founded by the same Emile Berliner, and they had a relationship, releasing records recorded by each other on the other side of the pond. Victor was a shareholder in Gramophone & Typewriter and then HMV, though I don't know what percent. I think by agreement HMV and Victor split up the rights to use the artwork in different parts of the world. HMV had the rights to the dog & gramophone logo in most of Europe and the Commonwealth (although Canada seems to have been a special case, as Berliner had already established a seperate company there; see Berliner Gramophone). Victor had rights to the logo in the USA, Latin America, and Japan (and possibly a few other non-European countries). While there are still some details I'm not sure of, I hope this helps. -- User:Infrogmation 07:35 15 Jun 2003 (UTC) : Actually, I belive the Victor company of japan (AKA JVC or Nivico ) held the rights to japan. User:cmacd123 09:05 20041006 :: Yes, after JVC split from US RCA Victor. -- User:Infrogmation 21:04, 6 Oct 2004 (UTC) :Ahem. In World War I, Italy fought AGAINST Germany. It was NOT allied with it. Figured someone should point this out. -User:Penta 02:04, 16 Feb 2004 (UTC) See other meanings of words starting from letter: RRA | RB | RC | RD | RE | RF | RG | RH | RI | RJ | RK | RL | RM | RN | RO | RP | RS | RT | RU | RW | RX | RY | RZ |Words begining with RCA: RCA RCA RCA-Victor_Records Rcabbott RCAC Rcaetano RCAF RCAF_Station_Beaverbank RCAF_Station_Boundary_Bay RCAF_Station_Dartmouth RCAF_Station_Debert RCAF_Station_Greenwood RCAF_Station_Shearwater RCAF_Station_Summerside Rcam Rcanb Rcarpadus Rcaught RCA_1802 RCA_Alascom RCA_connector RCA_Corporation RCA_COSMAC RCA_Dome RCA_Jack RCA_jack RCA_jack RCA_Mark_II_Sound_Synthesizer RCA_Mark_II_synthesiser RCA_Mark_II_Synthesizer RCA_Mark_II_synthesizer RCA_Records RCA_Records_albums RCA_Studio_2 RCA_Studio_2 RCA_Synthesizer RCA_TK-40 RCA_TK-40/41 RCA_TK-40A RCA_TK-41 RCA_Victor RCA_Victor_Records |
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