Word: ohga
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...leather case. It even had a second earphone jack so that two people could listen in at once. Masaru Ibuka, Sony's co-founder, traveled often for business and would find himself lugging Sony's bulky TC-D5 cassette recorder around to listen to music. He asked Norio Ohga, then Executive Deputy President, to design a playback-only stereo version, optimized for use with headphones. Ibuka brought the result - a compact, high-quality music player - to Chairman Akio Morita and reportedly said, "Try this. Don't you think a stereo cassette player that you can listen to while walking around...
...highly intelligent individual with superb management skills. But observers in the West are wondering how a foreigner who speaks no Japanese can hope to triumph at a company as clannish and complex as Sony. In fact, Idei himself represented a discontinuity with Sony's past. Unlike his predecessor, Norio Ohga, who was the surrogate son of co-founder Akio Morita, Idei was never viewed as an heir. Insiders referred to him as the company's first "salary-man CEO," implying that he was merely a hire and not a family member. Idei fancied himself as a kind of outsider...
...Schulhof question was one of a range of issues on which Sony chairman Ohga differed with his new president. Ohga had a soft spot for Schulhof, who was considered "family." In spite of that, he could not protect him. Idei told a friend he thought it would take him 18 months to get rid of Schulhof. It took half that time. Schulhof was gone by December...
Idei was having none of the hands-off-of-America policy of his predecessors, who were worried about cultural and political implications. "I had been offering many suggestions to Mr. Morita and Mr. Ohga about the nature of the U.S. business," recalls Idei. At the new Sony, all top managers report directly to Idei, who has also staffed the Los Angeles and New York City offices with key Japanese lieutenants...
...discs for computers. Last September, Sony set off a controversy by declaring that it had formed a consortium with Philips, Hewlett-Packard and Ricoh to produce a new format for the rewritable disc. "It has become very difficult to work out an international standard for anything these days," sighs Ohga...