Hitachi (disambiguation)
Hitachi is a multinational corporation specializing in high-technology.
Look up Hitachi in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
Hitachi may also refer to:
Places
- Hitachi, Ibaraki, Japan
- Hitachi Province, former province of Japan
People
- Hanako, Princess Hitachi (born 1940), member of the Japanese imperial family
- Masahito, Prince Hitachi (born 1935), member of the Japanese imperial family
Companies
- Hitachi Works, the oldest member of the Hitachi group and ancestral home of Hitachi, Ltd.
- Hitachi Cable, independent spin-off of Hitachi Works
- Hitachi Canadian Industries Ltd. (HCI), an independent subsidiary of Hitachi, Ltd. located in Saskatoon, Canada
- Hitachi Construction Machinery (Europe), subsidiary of Hitachi, Ltd., now parent of Euclid Trucks
- Hitachi Data Systems, a subsidiary of Hitachi, with enterprise storage systems group based both in Japan and in Santa Clara, California, US
- Hitachi Global Storage Technologies, disk drive manufacturer, wholly owned subsidiary of Western Digital
- Hitachi Maxell Ltd., commonly known as Maxell, a separate Japanese electronics company
- Hitachi Zosen Corporation — Osaka based engineering and heavy equipment company (also known as Hitachi Shipbuilding)
Products
- Hitachi Hatsukaze, aircraft engines built in Japan
- Hitachi Magic Wand, a massager and vibrator
Trains
- Hitachi (Australian train), EMUs formerly in use in Melbourne, Australia, manufactured by Hitachi, Ltd. in the 1970s
- Hitachi (Japanese train), a limited express train service in Japan named after the old province of Hitachi
- Hitachi A-train, a series of trains manufactured by Hitachi, Ltd.
Other uses
- Hitachi Foundation, a philanthropic organization founded in the U.S. by Hitachi in 1985
- Hitachi Tree, a named monkeypod tree in Moanalua Gardens and the corporate symbol of Hitachi, Ltd.
- T 258/03, also called Auction method/Hitachi, a decision of the Boards of Appeal of the European Patent Office
gollark: I don't really know how intellectual property issues "should" work, although I don't think the current approach of "just pretend they work like non-duplicable physical goods as much as possible" is a very good one.
gollark: I'm not saying that (Doctor Dan might be partly), just that it's not the same as theft and probably quite complex.
gollark: That seems a confusing line of thinking, it's not like the creator actually loses something like they would in actual theft.
gollark: ?
gollark: There's a tragedy-of-the-commons problem with that sort of line of thinking, though.
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