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| Pioneer Corporation | |
|---|---|
| Type | Public K.K. (TYO: 6773) |
| Founded | Tokyo, Japan (1938) |
| Headquarters | |
| Key people | Tamio Sudo, President |
| Industry | Consumer electronics |
| Products | Car audio and automotive navigation systems, Televisions (CRT Lens and Plasma), PC DVD drives including PC DVD recorders, "set-top" DVD players and DVD recorders, Misc. DJ equipment |
| Revenue | ▲ 797 billion Yen (March 31, 2007)[1] |
| Operating income | ▲12.5 billion Yen (March 31, 2007) |
| Net income | ▼ 6.7 billion Yen (March 31, 2007) |
| Employees | 37,622 (Consolidated, as of March 31, 2007) |
| Website | Pioneer USA Pioneer Europe Pioneer Japan Pioneer Australia Pioneer New Zealand Pioneer Latin America Pioneer Asia Pioneer Africa/Middle East |
Pioneer Corporation (パイオニア株式会社 Paio'nia Kabushiki-kaisha?) (TYO: 6773) is a multinational corporation that specializes in digital entertainment products, based in Tokyo, Japan. The company was founded in 1938 in Tokyo as a radio and speaker repair shop.[citation needed] Today, Pioneer is well-known for technology advancements in the consumer electronics industry.[citation needed]
Pioneer played a role in the development of interactive cable TV, the Laser Disc player, the first automotive Compact Disc player, the first detachable face car stereo, Supertuner technology, DVD and DVD recording, plasma display, and Organic LED display (OLED). The company works with optical disc and display technology and software products and is also a manufacturer. Sharp Corporation took a controlling stake in Pioneer in 2007.[citation needed]
On March 7, 2008, Pioneer Corp. announced that it will stop manufacturing its own plasma displays.[2][3] The likely reason being that Pioneer has not been able to turn a profit from their current plasma displays, as well as struggled to compete with rivals, such as Matsushita Co., who have better output efficiency. Pioneer will, however, continue to make plasma televisions, and is in talks with Matsushita to buy their plasma display panels and add its own processing units and other Pioneer technology.[4][5]
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