upvote
Solvinity = Solvent Divinity
reply
We're terrible at company and brand naming here in Europe. Just look at the "Wero" payment solution (formerly/currently iDeal). Like, who the hell came up with that stupid name?

The list of stupid European company names and product names are endless.

reply
I agree, the Dutch iDeal was probably the better name. However I'm not sure if this is an uniquely European problem. Wero's counterpart 'Zelle' doesn't seem to be that much better of a name.
reply
It's called Wero, because it means we and euro in all of the official EU languages.
reply
Only English-sounding names are cool. The terminal state of cultural domination.
reply
Why do you feel that Wero is a stupid name?
reply
> Solvinity is a pretty terrible company name.

I find it okay'ish. At least it's unique. Say, as much as I like Mario Zechner (who doesn't like HNers anymore for whatever reason), naming your product "Pi" is just terribly bad.

Facebook was a good name (hate the company but the name was good). But "Meta" is just dumbfucktarded.

Wait... I've got an idea: I'm going to make a product and name it "Alt". Or "Control".

Really: there are a lot of totally unhelpful name that just confuses everybody, including search engines, humans, and LLMs but I don't think "Solvinity" is that bad.

reply
I've always found Whatsapp a terrible name, but its so established now that 'apping' is understood. If you're big enough it seems that a bad name hardly hold you back.
reply
"To whatsapp" is a common verb, but I have never heard anyone say "apping".

Where do you live where "apping" is understood?

reply
Can confirm that it's an extremely common verb in The Netherlands.

https://onzetaal.nl/taalloket/appen-whatsappen-vervoeging

reply
Heard it many times in the Netherlands.
reply
Reminds me of the old joke:

After Bill and Melinda Gates have their honeymoon, Melinda says, "Now I know why you call it Microsoft."

reply