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Philips |  Lights Out; The Dutch electronics firm restructures, yet again. Economist, July 12, 2014. www.economist.com/news/business/ ... et-again-lights-out
 
 Note:
 (a) Philips “restructurings seem to be as endless as the staircases and waterfalls in the works of Escher, another famous Dutch name.”
 (i) MC Escher
 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M._C._Escher
 (1898-1972; a Dutch graphic artist)
 (ii) The German surname Escher denotes “someone from any of the various places called Esch, Esche, or Eschen [in Germany of course].”
 Dictionary of American Family Names, by Oxford University Press.
 (iii) esche (noun feminine; plural: eschen; from Old High German asc): "ash (tree)"
 en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Esche
 
 (b) “Eight days earlier, Philips had said part of its lighting division—the industry it started out in, in 1891—would be hived off, and outside shareholders sought. * * * What will remain of the lamps division will still be big, but its sales of incandescent bulbs are falling rapidly, as consumers switch to LEDs and other low-energy alternatives.”
 (i) See next posting.
 (ii) Philips
 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philips
 (founded in 1891 in Eindhove [which remains headquarters] by Gerard Philips and his father Frederik, a banker, to start the production of carbon-filament lamps)
 
 Compare: Thomas Edison in 1889 formed companies in New Jersey, one of which was a manufacturer of electric lighting fixtures, sockets. General Electric )incorporated in New York state) was formed in 1892 through merger of Edison's and other companies.
 (iii) hive off (vi, vt): "chiefly British"
 www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/hive+off
 
 (c) Philips “invented the rotary shaver and the compact disc”
 (i) Philishave
 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philishave
 (invented by Philips engineer Alexandre Horowitz [1904 - 1982; a Belgian-born Dutch], who used rotating cutters instead of the reciprocating cutters that had been used in previous electric shavers; introduced in 1939)
 
 Search reciprocating shaver with images.google.com, and you will immediately recognize it, which is still sold worldwide.
 (ii) compact disc
 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compact_disc
 (section 1 History: Philips and Sony)
 
 (d) “Mr [Philips CEO Frans] van Houten gained a reputation for taking hard decisions in his previous job running NXP, a semiconductor business that Philips sold in 2006.”
 
 In 1953 Philips set up Philips Semiconductors, which changed name in 2006 when sold "to a consortium of private equity investors in 2006. The new name, NXP, stood for the consumer's ‘Next eXPerience,’ according to then-CEO [of NXP, and current Philips CEO] Frans van Houten."
 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NXP
 (headquarters in the Netherlands)
 
 (e) “Since taking charge of its former parent [Philips] in 2011 he [van Houten] has got Philips out of making televisions”
 (i) This sentence is confusing. If you go to Philips website, it is still selling television sets worldwide.
 (ii) TPV Technology  冠捷科技
 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TPV_Technology
 (In 2011, TPV and Philips "agreed to form a Netherlands-based television manufacturing joint venture [called 'TP Vision'] comprising all of Philips' television operations, and owned 70% by TPV Technology and 30% by Philips")
 
 (f) Funai  船井電機株式会社
 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Funai
 (founded by Tetsurō FUNAI 船井 哲良 [currently its chairman, 84 years old] in 1961)
 
 The “rō” is actually 郎, but his parents selected 良 instead. That is why even Japanese do not know how to read Japanese names; they can guess, though.
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