RCA Corporation
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RCA Corporation
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RCA Corporation
RCA Victor Company
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RCA Victor Company
General Electric Co
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General Electric Co
R.C.A. Corporation
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R.C.A. Corporation
RCA SelectaVision VideoDiscs
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RCA SelectaVision VideoDiscs
RCA Manufacturing Co.
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RCA Manufacturing Co.
RCA Corp
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RCA Corp
Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America
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Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America
RCA Manufacturing Co.(About)
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RCA Manufacturing Co.(About)
Radio-Victor Company
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Radio-Victor Company
GE Enterprise Solutions
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GE Enterprise Solutions
Victor Talking Machine Company
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Victor Talking Machine Company
RCA
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RCA
Radio Corporation of America
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Radio Corporation of America
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Biographical History
The Radio Corporation of America was incorporated in Delaware on October 17, 1919, and changed its name to RCA Corporation on May 9, 1969. For over fifty years it was one of the country's leading manufacturers and vendors of radios, phonographs, televisions, and a wide array of consumer and military electronics products. Through subsidiaries, it operated the country's first radiotelegraph, radiotelephone and radio facsimile systems, as well as its pioneer radio and television networks. The company will always be identified with David Sarnoff (1891-1971), who began working for a predecessor company as an office boy in 1906, became vice president in 1922, president in 1930, and served as chairman from 1947 to1970. Sarnoff was one of the first to grasp the full potential of radio and television and imparted to the company its reputation for research and innovation.
David Sarnoff's son Robert succeeded to the presidency in 1966 and was named CEO in 1968. The younger Sarnoff began a program of conglomerate diversification, acquiring publisher Random House, Inc., and the Hertz Corporation rental car business in 1966. In a makeover designed to erase its historic connection with radio, the Radio Corporation of America became RCA Corporation on May 9, 1969. Robert Sarnoff also began an ill-fated push to make RCA the number two computer manufacturer, but after only a year, RCA sold its entire computer business to Sperry Univac in 1971-73.
Robert Sarnoff was ousted in 1975. The company continued to lose market share in consumer electronics to Japanese competition. Subsequent managers pursued a program of divestiture and downsizing that reduced the company to a core of telecommunications, electronic components, aerospace and military electronics and the NBC radio and television networks.
RCA Corporation was merged into the General Electric Company on June 9, 1986.
The Radio Corporation of America was incorporated in Delaware on October 17, 1919, and changed its name to RCA Corporation on May 9, 1969. For over fifty years it was one of the country's leading manufacturers and vendors of radios, phonographs, televisions, and a wide array of consumer and military electronics products. Through subsidiaries, it operated the country's first radiotelegraph, radiotelephone and radio facsimile systems, as well as its pioneer radio and television networks. The company will always be identified with David Sarnoff (1891-1971), who began working for a predecessor company as an office boy in 1906, became vice president in 1922, president in 1930, and served as chairman from 1947 to1970. Sarnoff was one of the first to grasp the full potential of radio and television and imparted to the company its reputation for research and innovation.
David Sarnoff's son Robert succeeded to the presidency in 1966 and was named CEO in 1968. The younger Sarnoff began a program of conglomerate diversification, acquiring publisher Random House, Inc., and the Hertz Corporation rental car business in 1966. In a makeover designed to erase its historic connection with radio, the Radio Corporation of America became RCA Corporation on May 9, 1969. Robert Sarnoff also began an ill-fated push to make RCA the number two computer manufacturer, but after only a year, RCA sold its entire computer business to Sperry Univac in 1971-73.
Robert Sarnoff was ousted in 1975. The company continued to lose market share in consumer electronics to Japanese competition. Subsequent managers pursued a program of divestiture and downsizing that reduced the company to a core of telecommunications, electronic components, aerospace and military electronics and the NBC radio and television networks.
RCA Corporation was merged into the General Electric Company on June 9, 1986.
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/151401364
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n50058013
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n50058013
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Languages Used
Subjects
Artificial satellites
Astronautics
Avionics
Color television
Computer engineering
Computer programming
Electrical engineering
Electrical engineering
Guided missiles
Research, Industrial
Phonograph
Radar
Radio
Radio relay system
RCA 301 (Computer)
RCA 501 (Computer)
RCA 601 (Computer)
Semiconductors
Solid state electronics
Sound
Television
Television
Transistors
Nationalities
Americans
Activities
Occupations
Legal Statuses
Places
Convention Declarations
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>