Radio Corporation of America

The former Radio Corporation of America, better known for its acronym RCA , was a registered trademark used by two other companies that emerged from it: The two companies bought the rights to multinationalGeneral Electric, which had taken control over the RCA conglomerate in 1987 and maintained its interest in communications company subsidiary NBC .
 * Technicolor, which manufactures electronic products such as televisions , DVD players , tape recorders video , decoders of satellite TV , camcorders , stereos, telephones , and related accessories.
 * Sony Music Entertainment, which owns RCA Victor , RCA Ariola , Ariola Records and RCA Records brands that it received from one of its owners, BMG .

Initially, General Electric continued to maintain control over the RCA brands (including the rights of the His Master's Voice brand, known worldwide as HMV, or Nipper , in some parts of America ), but these rights subsequently passed to the Technicolor and Bertelsmann companies .

Due to its popularity during the 1930s to the 1950s, its high manufacturing quality, its technological innovations, its style and its name, the old RCA radios are one of the objects most appreciated by radio collectors.

The company created the so-called RCA connector, very popular in today's home audio and video systems.