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NEC Corporation
Native name
日本電気株式会社
Nippon Denki Kabushiki gaisha
FormerlyNippon Electric Company, Limited (1899-1983, in English)
Company typePublic
TYO: 6701
ISINJP3733000008[1]
Industry
Founded17 July 1899; 125 years ago (1899-07-17) in Tokyo, Japan
HeadquartersNEC Supertower, ,
Japan
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Products
Services
Revenue¥3.48 trillion (2024)[3]
¥185.01 billion (2024)[3]
¥149.52 billion (2024)[3]
Total assets¥4.23 trillion (2024)[3]
Total equity¥2.09 trillion (2024)[3]
OwnerAT&T Corporation (via Western Electric, 1899-1941)
Sumitomo Group
Number of employees
114,714 (2021)[3]
Subsidiaries
List
Websitenec.com

NEC Corporation (日本電気株式会社, Nippon Denki Kabushiki gaisha, an acronym for the Nippon Electric Company) is a Japanese multinational information technology and electronics corporation, headquartered at the NEC Supertower in Minato, Tokyo, Japan.[4] It provides IT and network solutions, including cloud computing, artificial intelligence (AI), Internet of Things (IoT) platform, and telecommunications equipment and software[5][6] to business enterprises, communications services providers and to government agencies, and has also been the biggest PC vendor in Japan since the 1980s when it launched the PC-8000 series.

NEC was the world's fourth-largest PC manufacturer by 1990.[7] Its semiconductors business unit was the world's largest semiconductor company by annual revenue from 1985 to 1992, the second largest in 1995, one of the top three in 2000, and one of the top 10 in 2006.[8][9] NEC spun off its semiconductor business to Renesas Electronics and Elpida Memory. Once Japan's major electronics company, NEC has largely withdrawn from manufacturing since the beginning of the 21st century.

NEC was #463 on the 2017 Fortune 500 list.[10] NEC is a member of the Sumitomo Group.

History

[edit]

NEC

[edit]

Kunihiko Iwadare and Takeshiro Maeda established Nippon Electric Limited Partnership on August 31, 1898, by using facilities that they had bought from Miyoshi Electrical Manufacturing Company. Iwadare acted as the representative partner; Maeda handled company sales. Western Electric, which had an interest in the Japanese phone market, was represented by Walter Tenney Carleton.[11] Carleton was also responsible for the renovation of the Miyoshi facilities.[12] It was agreed that the partnership would be reorganized as a joint-stock company when the treaty would allow it. On July 17, 1899, the revised treaty between Japan and the United States went into effect. Nippon Electric Company, Limited was organized the same day as Western Electric Company to become the first Japanese joint-venture with foreign capital.[13] Iwadare was named managing director. Ernest Clement and Carleton were named as directors. Maeda and Mototeru Fujii were assigned to be auditors. Iwadare, Maeda, and Carleton handled the overall management.[14]

The company started with the production, sales, and maintenance of telephones and switches. NEC modernized the production facilities with the construction of the Mita Plant in 1901 at Mita Shikokumachi. It was completed in December 1902.

The Japanese Ministry of Communications adopted a new technology in 1903: the common battery switchboard supplied by NEC. The common battery switchboards powered the subscriber phone, eliminating the need for a permanent magnet generator in each subscriber's phone. The switchboards were initially imported, but were manufactured locally by 1909.[15]

NEC started exporting telephone sets to China in 1904. In 1905, Iwadare visited Western Electric in the U.S. to see their management and production control. On his return to Japan, he discontinued the "oyakata" system of sub-contracting and replaced it with a new system where managers and employees were all direct employees of the company. Inefficiency was also removed from the production process. The company paid higher salaries with incentives for efficiency. New accounting and cost controls were put in place, and time clocks was installed.[16]

Between 1899 and 1907 the number of telephone subscribers in Japan rose from 35,000 to 95,000.[17] NEC entered the China market in 1908 with the implementation of the telegraph treaty between Japan and China. They also entered the Korean market, setting up an office in Seoul in January 1908. During the period from 1907 to 1912 sales rose from 1.6 million yen to 2 million yen. The expansion of the Japanese phone service had been a key part of NEC's success during this period.

The Ministry of Communications delayed a third expansion plan of the phone service in March 1913, despite having 120,000 potential telephone subscribers waiting for phone installations. NEC sales fell sixty percent between 1912 and 1915. During the interim, Iwadare started importing appliances, including electric fans, kitchen appliances, washing machines, and vacuum cleaners. Electric fans had never been seen in Japan before. The imports were intended to prop up company sales. In 1916, the government resumed the delayed telephone-expansion plan, adding 75,000 subscribers and 326,000 kilometers of new toll lines. Thanks to this third expansion plan, NEC expanded at a time when much of the rest of the Japanese industry contracted.[18]

1919 to 1938

[edit]

In 1919, NEC started its first association with Sumitomo, engaging Sumitomo Densen Seizosho to manufacture cables. As part of the venture, NEC provided cable manufacturing equipment to Sumitomo Densen. Rights to Western Electric's duplex cable patents were also transferred to Sumitomo Densen.[19]

The Great Kantō earthquake struck Japan in 1923. 140,000 people were killed and 3.4 million were left homeless.[20] Four of NEC's factories were destroyed, killing 105 of NEC's engineers and workers. Thirteen of Tokyo's telephone offices were destroyed by fire. Telephone and telegraph service was interrupted by damage to telephone cables. In response, the Ministry of Communications accelerated major programs to install automatic telephone switching systems and enter radio broadcasting.[21][1] The first automatic switching systems were the Strowger-type model made by Automatic Telephone Manufacturing Co. (ATM) in the United Kingdom. NEC participated in the installation of the automatic switching systems, ultimately becoming the general sales agent for ATM. NEC developed its own Strowger-type automatic switching system in 1924, the first in Japan. One of the plants almost leveled during the Kanto earthquake, the Mita Plant, was chosen to support expanding production. A new three-story steel-reinforced concrete building was built, starting in 1925. It was modeled after the Western Electric Hawthorne Works.

NEC started its radio communications business in 1924. Japan's first radio broadcaster, Radio Tokyo was founded in 1924 and started broadcasting in 1925. NEC imported the broadcasting equipment from Western Electric.[22] The expansion of radio broadcasting into Osaka and Nagoya marked the emergence of radio as an Industry. NEC established a radio research unit in 1924. NEC started developing electron tubes in 1925. By 1930, they were manufacturing their first 500 W radio transmitter. They provided the Chinese Xinjing station with a 100 kW radio broadcasting system in 1934.

Photo-telegraphic equipment developed by NEC transmitted photos of the accession ceremony of Emperor Hirohito. The ceremony was held in Kyoto in 1928. The Newspapers Asahi Shimbun and Mainichi Shimbun were competing to cover the ceremony. The Asahi Shimbun was using a Siemens device. The Mainichi was planning to use French photo-telegraphic equipment. In the end, both papers acquired and used the NEC product, due to its faster transmission rate and higher picture quality.[23]

In 1929 Nippon Electric provided Japan's Ministry of Communications with the A-type switching system, the first of these systems to be developed in Japan. Nippon supplied Japan's Ministry of Communications with nonloaded line carrier equipment for long-distance telephone channels in 1937.[24]

1938 to 1945

[edit]

World War II was described by the company as being the blackest days of its history.[25] In 1938 the Mita and Tamagawa plants were placed under military control, with direct supervision by military officers. In 1939, Nippon Electric established a research laboratory in the Tamagawa plant. It became the first Japanese company to successfully test microwave multiplex communications.[26] On December 22, 1941, the enemy property control law was passed. NEC shares owned by International Standard Electric Corporation (ISE), an ITT subsidiary, and Western Electric affiliate were seized. Capital and technical relations were abruptly severed. The "Munitions Company Law" was passed in October 1943, placing overall control of NEC plants under military jurisdiction.[27] The Ueno plant was leveled by the military attack in March 1945. Fire bombings in April and May heavily damaged the Tamagawa Plant, reducing its capacity by forty percent. The Okayama Plant was totally destroyed by a bombing attack in June of the same year. At the end of the war, NEC's production had been substantially reduced by damage to its facilities, and by material and personnel shortages.

1945 to 1980

[edit]

After the war, production was slowly returned to civilian use. NEC re-opened its major plants by the end of January 1946.[28] NEC began transistor research and development in 1950. It started exporting radio-broadcast equipment to Korea under the first major postwar contract in 1951. NEC received the Deming Prize for excellence in quality control in 1952. Computer research and development began in 1954. NEC produced the first crossbar switching system in Japan. It was installed at Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Public Corporation (currently Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation; NTT) in 1956. NEC began joint research and development with NTT of electronic switching systems the same year. NEC established Taiwan Telecommunication Company as their first postwar overseas joint venture in 1958. They completed the NEAC-1101 and NEAC-1102 computers in the same year. In September 1958, NEC built their first fully transistorized computer, the NEAC-2201, with parts made solely in Japan.[29] One year later, they demonstrated it at the UNESCO AUTOMATH show in Paris. The company began integrated circuit research and development in 1960. In 1963 NEC started trading as American Depositary Receipts, with ten million shares being sold in the United States.[30] Nippon Electric New York (now NEC America Inc.) was incorporated in the same year.[28]

The NEC logo used from 1963 to 1992[31]

NEC supplied KDD with submarine cable systems for laying in the Pacific Ocean in 1964. They supplied short-haul 24 channel PCM carrier transmission equipment to NTT in 1965. NEC de Mexico, S. A. de C. V., NEC do Brasil, S. A., NEC Australia Pty. Ltd. were established between 1968 and 1969. NEC supplied Comsat Corporation with the SPADE satellite communications system in 1971. In 1972, Switzerland ordered a NEC satellite communications earth station. The same year, a small transportable satellite communications earth station was set up in China. Shares of NEC common stock were listed on the Amsterdam Stock Exchange in 1973. NEC also designed an automated broadcasting system for the Japan Broadcasting Corporation in the same year. NEC Electronics (Europe) GmbH was also established. In 1974, the ACOS series computer was introduced. The New Central Research Laboratories were completed in 1975. In 1977, Japan's National Space Development Agency launched the NEC geostationary meteorological satellite, named Himawari.[32]

During this period NEC introduced the concept of "C&C", the integration of computers and communications. NEC America Inc. opened a plant in Dallas, Texas to manufacture PABX and telephone systems in 1978. They also acquired Electronic Arrays, Inc. of California the same year to start semiconductor chip production in the United States.[33]

1980 to 2000

[edit]
A 1982 NEC APC microcomputer

In 1980, NEC created the first digital signal processor, the NEC μPD7720. NEC Semiconductors (UK) Ltd. was established in 1981, producing VLSIs and LSIs. NEC introduced the 8-bit PC-8800 series personal computer in 1981, followed by the 16-bit PC-9800 series in 1982. In 1983 NEC stock was listed on the Basel, Geneva, and Zurich, Switzerland exchanges. NEC quickly became the dominant leader of the Japanese PC industry, holding 80% market share.[34] NEC changed its English company name to NEC Corporation the same year. NEC Information Systems, Inc. started manufacturing computers and related products in the United States in 1984. NEC also released the V-series processor the same year. In 1986, NEC delivered its SX-2 supercomputer to the Houston Advanced Research Center, The Woodlands, Texas. In the same year, the NEAX61 digital switching system went into service. In 1987, NEC Technologies (UK) Ltd. was established in the United Kingdom to manufacture VCRs, printers, and computer monitors and mobile telephones for Europe. Also that year, NEC licensed technology from Hudson Soft, a video game manufacturer, to create a video game console called the PC-Engine (later released in 1989 as the TurboGrafx-16 in the North American market). Its prototype 3D spec successor, the Tetsujin was originally set to be released in 1992, but the lack of completed games pushed the launch date about early 1993, which was planned debut in Japan. While the PC-Engine achieved a considerable following, it has been said that NEC held a much stronger influence on the video game industry through its role as a leading semiconductor manufacturer than through any of its direct video game products.[35] NEC USA, Inc. was established in 1989 as a holding company for North American operations.

In 1983, NEC Brasil (pt), the Brazilian subsidiary of NEC, was forced to nationalize its corporate stock under orders of the Brazilian military government, whereby shareholder control of NEC Brasil was ceded to the private equity group Brasilinvest of Brazilian investment banker Mário Garnero. Since NEC Brasil's foundation in 1968, it had become the major supplier of telecommunications equipment to the Brazilian government.[36] In 1986, the then Minister of Communications Antônio Carlos Magalhães put NEC Brasil in financial difficulties by suspending all government contract payments to the company, whose main client was the federal government.[36] With the subsidiary in crisis, the NEC Corporation in Japan sold NEC Brasil to Organizações Globo for only one million US dollars (US$1,000,000).[36] Shortly thereafter, Magalhães resumed the government contracts and corresponding payments, and NEC Brazil became valued at over 350 million US dollars (US$350,000,000).[36] Suspicions regarding the NEC-Globo deal, which included among other things the unilateral breach of contract by Globo founder Roberto Marinho regarding the management of a regional television station in the Brazilian state of Bahia,[36] took to the national stage only in 1992 during the first corruption charges against the impeached Brazilian president Fernando Collor de Mello. Organizações Globo subsequently sold their shares in NEC Brazil, which hit their all-time high during the state monopoly years, back to NEC Corporation in 1999 following the break-up and privatization of the Brazilian state-owned telephone monopoly Telebrás.[37]

In 1990, the new head office building, known as the "Super Tower", was completed in Shiba, Tokyo. Additionally, joint-venture agreements were established to manufacture and market digital electronic switching systems and LSIs in China. In 1993 NEC's asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) switching system, the NEAX61 (Nippon Electronic Automatic Exchange) ATM Service Node, went into service in the United States. NEC Europe, Ltd. was established as a holding company for European operations the same year. The NEC C&C Research Laboratories, NEC Europe, Ltd. were opened in Germany in 1994. NEC (China) Co, Ltd. was established as a holding company for Chinese operations in 1996. In 1997 NEC developed 4Gbit DRAM, and their semiconductor group was honored with one of the first Japan Quality Awards. In 1998, NEC opened the world's most advanced semiconductor R&D facility.

A NEC Versa 6010H from c. 1996
NEC Mobile Gear II MC/R330 handheld computer running Windows CE 2.0 (Japanese market, 1998)

NEC had been the no. 1 personal computer vendor in Japan during the 1980s, but it faced increasing competition from Fujitsu, Seiko Epson and IBM Japan. Nevertheless, by the early 1990s, NEC was still the largest, having well over 50% market share in the Japanese market. Competition heated up later as rival Fujitsu started to aggressively market its computers, which were industry standard (x86) instead of NEC's indigenous models.

In June 1994, NEC purchased the California-based Packard Bell company to produce desktop PCs in a common manufacturing plant for the North American market. As a result, NEC Technologies (USA) was merged with Packard Bell to create Packard Bell NEC Inc. By 1997, NEC's share was reduced to about 35%.[38]

In decades, NEC released a new console for its predecessor SuperGrafx, the Japan-only PC-FX, a 32-bit system with a tower-like design; it enjoyed a small but steady stream of games until 1998, when NEC finally abandoned the video games industry.

NEC also supplied rival Nintendo with the RISC-based CPU, V810 (same one used in the PC-FX) for the Virtual Boy[39] and VR4300 CPU for the Nintendo 64, released in 1995–1996, and both SNK updated VR4300 CPU (64-bit MIPS III) on Hyper Neo Geo 64,[40] as well as to former rival Sega with a version of its PowerVR 2 GPU for the Dreamcast, released in 1997–1998. After working the previous chipset on the system. NEC supplied Bandai's WonderSwan handheld console, which was originally developed by Gunpei Yokoi, with the V30 MZ CPU.[41][42] In the 2000s, NEC manufactured dynamic RAM process chips and produced for the GameCube GPU, Flipper, a graphics card development by ArtX.[43][44][45][46]

NEC celebrated their 100th anniversary in 1999.

2000 to present

[edit]
Kaoru Yano, the previous chairman of NEC

In 2000, NEC formed a joint-venture with Samsung SDI to manufacture OLED displays.[47] NEC Electronics Corporation was separated from NEC in 2002 as a new semiconductor company.[48] NEC Laboratories America, Inc. (NEC Labs) started in November 2002 as a merger of NEC Research Institute (NECI) and NEC USA's Computer and Communications Research Laboratory (CCRL).[49] NEC built the Earth Simulator Computer (ESC), the fastest supercomputer in the world from 2002 to 2004.[50]

In 2003 NEC had a 20.8% market share in the personal computer market in Japan, slightly ahead of Fujitsu.[51]

In 2004, NEC abandoned not only the OLED business, but the display business as a whole, by selling off their plasma display business and exiting from the joint-venture with Samsung SDI. Samsung bought all of the shares and related patents owned by NEC, incorporating Samsung OLED, which subsequently merged with Samsung Display.[52][53]

In 2007, NEC and Nissan Co. Corp. started evaluating a joint venture to produce lithium ion batteries for hybrid and electric cars.[54] The two companies established Automotive Energy Supply Corporation as a result.

On April 23, 2009, Renesas Technology Corp and NEC Electronics Corp struck a basic agreement to merge by around April 2010.[55] On April 1, 2010, NEC Electronics and Renesas Technology merged forming Renesas Electronics which is set to be fourth largest semiconductor company according to iSuppli published data.[56] By Q3 2010, NEC held a 19.8% market share in the PC market in Japan.[57]

On January 27, 2011, NEC formed a joint venture with Chinese PC maker Lenovo, the fourth largest PC maker in the world. As part of the deal, the companies said in a statement they will establish a new company called Lenovo NEC Holdings B.V., which will be registered in the Netherlands. NEC will receive US$175 million from Lenovo through the issuance of Lenovo's shares. Lenovo, through a unit, will own a 51% stake in the joint venture, while NEC will hold a 49% stake.[58] In February 2011, Bloomberg News said the joint venture would allow Lenovo to expand in the field of servers, and NEC's Masato Yamamoto said NEC would be able to grow in China.[59]

On January 26, 2012, NEC Corporation announced that it would cut 10,000 jobs globally due to a big loss on NEC's consolidated financial statement in line with the economic crisis in Europe and lagged in the development of smartphones in the domestic market compared to Apple and Samsung. Previously, in January 2009 NEC has cut about 20,000 jobs, mainly in sluggish semiconductor and liquid crystal display related businesses.[60]

In 2013 NEC was the biggest PC server manufacturer in Japan, with a 23.6% share.[61] In August 2014, NEC Corporation was commissioned to build a super-fast undersea data transmission cable linking the United States and Japan for a consortium of international companies consisting of China Mobile International, China Telecom Global, Global Transit, Google, KDDI and SingTel. The pipeline went online June 30, 2016.[62][63] It exited from the smartphone market in 2015 by dissolving NEC Mobile Communications, bailing out the other participants in the smartphone joint-venture.

In April 2017, KEMET Corporation announced it would purchase a 61% controlling interest in NEC Tokin from NEC, making NEC Tokin its wholly owned subsidiary. Once the purchase is complete, the company will change its name to "Tokin Corporation".[64]

In July 2018, NEC established its subsidiary, NEC X, in Silicon Valley, to fast-track technologies and business ideas selected from inside and outside NEC. NEC X created a corporate accelerator program that works with entrepreneurs, start-ups and existing companies to help them develop new products that leverage NEC's emerging technologies.[65]

In August 2018, Envision Energy struck an agreement with Nissan and NEC to acquire their automotive battery joint venture.[66][67][68] In December 2018, NEC announced that it would acquire KMD, the largest Danish IT company, for $1.2 billion to strengthen its digital government business.[69]

NEC sold its sixty-year-old lighting business in April 2019.[70] As of September 2019, NEC is the largest supplier of AI surveillance technology in the world.[71]

In the first half of 2020, NEC sold a majority stake in NEC Display Solutions, the professional display subsidiary, to Sharp Corporation and decided to gradually curtail the money-losing energy storage business throughout the decade.[72][73]

Upon the suggested banning of Huawei's 5G equipment led by the United States in 2020, being a diminished supplier, NEC was galvanized to ramp up its relatively small 5G network business to fill the void in the telecommunications equipment markets of the United States and the United Kingdom. NTT, the largest carrier in Japan, invested $596 million for a 4.8 percent stake in NEC to assist this move.[74]

In December 2020, NEC acquired Swiss digital banking solution developer Avaloq for US$2.2 billion.[75]

Operations

[edit]

As of July 2018, NEC has 6 larger business segments—Public, Enterprise, Network Services, System Platform, Global, and Others.[76] It has renamed its Telecom Carrier business to Network Service.

Principal subsidiaries of NEC include:

Products

[edit]
An NTT DoCoMo FOMA N-02C mobile phone produced by NEC

Defense products include:

  • J/TPS-102 Self-propelled ground-based early warning 3D radar (JGSDF)
  • Broadband multipurpose radio system (JGSDF)
  • Advanced Combat Infantry Equipment System [ACIES] (JSDF) – Major subcontractor
  • Howa rifle system (JSDF) – Major subcontractor as part of ACIES

Food

Laptops

[edit]

Supercomputers

[edit]
The Earth Simulator
  • 1983 Announced the SX-1 and SX-2 supercomputers
  • 1989 Introduction of SX-3
  • 1994 First announcement of SX-4
  • 1999 Delivery of SX-5
  • 2002 Introduced SX-6
  • 2002 Installation of the Earth Simulator, the world's fastest supercomputer from 2002 to 2004 reaching a speed of 35,600 gigaflops
  • 2005 NEC SX-8 in production
  • 2006 Announced the SX-8R
  • 2007 Announced the SX-9
  • 2011 First announcement of the NEC SX-9's successor[80]
  • 2013 Announced the SX-ACE
  • 2017 Announced the SX-Aurora TSUBASA computing platform that expands the horizons of supercomputing, Artificial Intelligence and Big Data analytics.[81]

Achievements

[edit]

Achievements of NEC include:

  • the discovery of single-walled carbon nanotubes by Sumio Iijima[82]
  • the invention of the widely used MUX-scan design for test methodology (contrast with the IBM-developed level-sensitive scan design methodology)
  • the world's first demonstration of the one-qubit rotation gate in solid state devices.
  • As for mobile phones, NEC pioneered key technologies like color displays, 3G support, dual screens and camera modules.[83]
  • Developed a facial recognition system able to detect and distinguish human faces through medical masks.[84]
  • Released the first home console video game system to use compact discs, being the first widely available product to use compact discs as a platform for interactive video entertainment outside of home computer use.

Sponsorships

[edit]

NEC was the main (title) sponsor of the Davis Cup competition until 2002, when BNP Paribas took over the sponsorship.[85]

NEC between 1982 and 2012 sponsored the NEC Cup, a Go tournament in Japan.[citation needed]

NEC between 1986 and 2003 sponsored the NEC Shun-Ei, a Go tournament for young players in Japan.

NEC sponsored the English football club Everton from 1985 to 1995. The 1995 FA Cup Final triumph was Everton's final game of the decade-long NEC sponsorship, and Danka took over as sponsors.[86]

NEC first time signed the deal to sponsor Sauber F1 Team from 2011 season until 2014 season.[87]

Right after Sauber, NEC continue sponsored Sahara Force India F1 Team for 2015 season until its demise during 2018 season.[88] Since then NEC has sponsored for their last time its successor Racing Point only in 2019 season.

In April 2013, NEC became the umbrella sponsor for PGA Tour Latinoamérica, a third-tier men's professional golf tour.[89]

Sports teams

[edit]

These started as works teams, but over the years came to include professional players:

NEC also used to own Montedio Yamagata of the football (soccer) J. League, but as of 2009 just sponsors them along with other local companies.

The following team is defunct.

See also

[edit]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^ "NetCracker Technology is a brand of NEC Co. (NEC1)". Allbrands.markets. Retrieved 10 July 2024.
  2. ^ "NEC Corporate profile Management". Retrieved 1 January 2024.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Full Year Consolidated Financial Results for the Fiscal Year Ended March 31, 2024" (PDF). 1 October 2018.
  4. ^ "Corporate Profile." NEC. Retrieved on July 12, 2010.
  5. ^ "NEC IoT Network Solution: NEC Digital Network Transformation". NEC. Retrieved 16 September 2019.
  6. ^ "Accelerating DX with 5G: For Telecom Operators". NEC. Retrieved 17 September 2019.
  7. ^ Fransman, Martin (1995). Japan's Computer and Communications Industry: The Evolution of Industrial Giants and Global Competitiveness. Oxford University Press. p. 17. ISBN 9780198233336.
  8. ^ "Tracking the Top 10 Semiconductor Sales Leaders Over 26 Years". Semiconductor Market Research. IC Insights. 12 December 2011.
  9. ^ "WORLDWIDE IC MANUFACTURERS" (PDF). 14 August 2023.
  10. ^ "NEC Financials and News". fortune.com. Archived from the original on 24 June 2017. Retrieved 16 October 2018. NEC is #463 on the 2017 Fortune 500 list.
  11. ^ Mason 1987, p. 94.
  12. ^ NEC 1984, p. 6.
  13. ^ Mason 1987, p. 95.
  14. ^ NEC 1984, p. 8.
  15. ^ "history". nec. Retrieved 10 November 2015.
  16. ^ NEC 1984, p. 9
  17. ^ NEC 1984, p. 12.
  18. ^ NEC 1984, p. 15.
  19. ^ Fitzgerald, Robert (7 January 2016). The Rise of the Global Company: Multinationals and the Making of the Modern World. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-316-33828-5.
  20. ^ "Kanto Earthquake | Volunteerism in Japan". Retrieved 27 August 2020.
  21. ^ "The 120-Year History of Oki Electric | Corporate Information | OKI Global". www.oki.com. Retrieved 27 August 2020.
  22. ^ NEC 1984, p. 20
  23. ^ "Vendor Network Architectures - Part XIX: NEC Unified Solutions". www.enterprisenetworkingplanet.com. 4 April 2006. Retrieved 27 August 2020.
  24. ^ NEC 1984, p. 22
  25. ^ NEC 1984, p. 31.
  26. ^ NEC 1984, p. 30
  27. ^ NEC 1984, p. 30.
  28. ^ a b "History of NEC Corporation – FundingUniverse". www.fundinguniverse.com. Retrieved 27 August 2020.
  29. ^ "NEAC-2201-Computer Museum". museum.ipsj.or.jp. Retrieved 27 August 2020.
  30. ^ SEC. "Nec Corp 2007 Foreign Issuer Report 6-K". SEC.report. Archived from the original on 3 October 2020. Retrieved 21 August 2020.
  31. ^ NEC 1984, p. 46.
  32. ^ "GMS - eoPortal Directory - Satellite Missions". directory.eoportal.org. Retrieved 21 August 2020.
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  34. ^ Page 211, Inventing the Electronic Century: The Epic Story of the Consumer Electronics and Computer Industries, with a new preface by Alfred Dupont CHANDLER, Takashi Hikino, Andrew Von Nordenflycht, Alfred D Chandler, ISBN 0674029399, 9780674029392
  35. ^ "75 Power Players". Next Generation (11). Imagine Media: 56. November 1995. But NEC's influence stretches far above and beyond its immediate videogame products. As a leading semiconductor manufacturer, the company's influence is there from the cradle to the grave of every aspect of computing.
  36. ^ a b c d e Hartog, Simon (director) (September 1993). Beyond Citizen Kane. United Kingdom: Channel 4.
  37. ^ Lobato, Elvira. "Globo vende a Nec para os japoneses". Folha de S.Paulo. 31 July 1999. Page accessed 28 December 2017.
  38. ^ "NEC faces tough market in Japan". Cnet. 26 November 1997. Retrieved 14 August 2018.
  39. ^ Edwards, Benj (21 August 2015). "Unraveling The Enigma Of Nintendo's Virtual Boy, 20 Years Later". Fast Company. Retrieved 2 April 2024.
  40. ^ "The failed heir: The Hyper Neo Geo 64!". 20 March 2021.
  41. ^ "Hardware Classics: Bandai WonderSwan". 11 March 2014.
  42. ^ "Handheld Classics: Bandai WonderSwan". 18 June 2008.
  43. ^ "NEC - Guide".
  44. ^ "NEC Plant opens for Gamecube Production". 28 January 2001.
  45. ^ "NEC in volume production with GameCube graphics engine". 27 February 2001.
  46. ^ "GameCube Successor Under Development".
  47. ^ Robertson, Jack (6 December 2000). "Samsung and NEC set up joint display venture". EE Times. Retrieved 1 June 2024.
  48. ^ Hara, Yoshiko (1 November 2002). "NEC spins off semiconductor operations". EE Times. Retrieved 1 June 2024.
  49. ^ Robertson, Jack (23 September 2002). "NEC merges research laboratories". EE Times. Retrieved 1 June 2024.
  50. ^ "The Earth Simulator". TOP500. Retrieved 1 June 2024.
  51. ^ Page 110, Industrial Development in Postwar Japan by Hirohisa Kohama, ISBN 978-0415437073
  52. ^ "NEC drops its OLED business".
  53. ^ "Samsung SDI to merge with Samsung OLED | OLED-Info". www.oled-info.com. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  54. ^ "Mitsubishi Heavy to make lithium ion car batteries". Archived from the original on 11 January 2008.
  55. ^ Bijoy Koyitty; Deepak Kannan (23 April 2009). "Renesas, NEC reach basic agreement to merge: Nikkei". reuters.com. Thomson Reuters. Retrieved 14 May 2009. Renesas Technology Corp and NEC Electronics Corp (6723.T) have struck a basic agreement to merge by around next April, the Nikkei business daily reported.
  56. ^ "Renesas Electronics is biggest 'non-memory' chip firm". ElectronicsWeekly.com. 2 April 2010. Retrieved 3 April 2010.
  57. ^ "Lenovo, NEC Form PC Joint Venture in Japan". PCWorld. Retrieved 14 August 2018.
  58. ^ "NEC Forms PC Joint Venture With Lenovo, Posts Wider Loss". Wall Street Journal. 27 January 2011. Retrieved 9 February 2011.[permanent dead link]
  59. ^ Ranii, David (9 February 2011). "Lenovo and NEC may team up on servers". News & Observer. Archived from the original on 10 February 2011. Retrieved 9 February 2011.
  60. ^ "Japan's electronics industry forced to eliminate tens of thousands of jobs". January 28, 2012. Archived from the original on January 30, 2012. Retrieved January 31, 2012.
  61. ^ "Lenovo hopes to dominate Japan server, PC markets". Nikkei Asian Review. Retrieved 14 August 2018.
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References

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  • Mark Mason, Foreign Direct Investment and Japanese Economic Development, 1899–1931, Business and Economic History, Second Series, Volume Sixteen, 1987.
  • NEC Corporation, NEC Corporation, The First 80 Years, 1984, ISBN 4-931172-01-6.
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