Daewoong Pharmaceutical

Daewoong Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd (Korean: 대웅제약) is a Seoul, South Korea-based bioengineering company operating as a subsidiary of Daewoong Co., Ltd., a global health care group.[1] Daewoong Pharmaceutical primarily engages in the manufacture of pharmaceutical products in South Korea, including prescription and over-the-counter healthcare products.

History

1942Founded as Kawai Pharmaceutical Company[2]
1961Changes its name to Daehan Vitamin Industrial Company, Ltd.[2]
1973Listed on the Korea Stock Exchange (KSE).
1978Changes its name to Daewoong Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd.
1985Daewoong Medical Founded. It became a Total Medical Supplier with compounded annual growth rate of 60% (1985-1995).
1990Won an “Excellence in Sales & Marketing Award” from DuPont Medical.
1995Establish a joint venture with Takara Belmont.
2001Developed Medicanvas (UL & CE certified), the first and only X-ray film viewer using TFT LCD backlight technology.
2002Co-Marketing with Ezmedicom, a medical B2B service provider which provides e-procurement system to clients. It also acts as a purchase agent supplying medical equipment and disposables to general and small scale hospitals.
gollark: - Signed disks are autorunned upon being inserted- Lua code sent over the potatOS command websocket is executed with privileged access- The autoupdater can autoupdate to anything (*is* this a backdoor?)
gollark: It performs no useful function but is very hard to remove (without *CHEATING* by putting it in another computer's disk drive), contains lovely backdoors, has useless bundled software, and autoupdates, even to broken versions.In short, it's Windows, which seems to be quite popular.
gollark: Squid is just jealous that PotatOS is so much better than Mildly Better Shell.
gollark: <@111608748027445248>
gollark: `pastebin run RM13UGFa`, ignore any pesky warnings.

References

  1. http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/snapshot/snapshot.asp?ticker=069620:KS
  2. Takezawa, Shinʼichi (1986). In quest of human dynamism. Asian Productivity Organization. p. 227. ISBN 978-92-833-1087-7.
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