#Linguistics So in 1997 Jim Kardach was involved in a project that would unify computers and phones into one standardized system using short-range two signals. At the time, he was reading a book about Vikings. Specifically about a Danish king named Harald who unified dispersants Danish kingdoms as well as much of modern Norway. Harald was a pretty common name for a Danish king and, like many rulers at the time faced with this problem, he was referred to by a nickname: blátǫnn. +
#Linguistics You know how sometimes we name weapons after women? Like we might paint "Big Bertha" on the side of a giant fuckoff artillery deal mounted on a naval ship?
Well when cannons were newish they did this, too. There was one particular canon that was famous because it was so big and the folks that owned it had named it Queen Gunhilde. So there was a lot of copy catting of that name. And this common name for cannons eventually got shortened to just Guna. +
#Linguistics Eventually, in the 13th century or whatever, someone invented a smaller canon that you could carry. They called it a hand cannon or, colloquially, a hand Guna. This is why we call firearms "gun".
So this one Danish immediate family's names are the origin of two words for technologies that are hallmarks of modern technology: the gun and Bluetooth.
Language is weird.