Package (pronounce pak-ij)
(1) A bundle of something, usually of small or medium
size, that is packed and wrapped or boxed; parcel.
(2) A container, as a box or case, in which something is
or may be packed.
(3) Something conceived of as a (usually) compact unit
having particular characteristics.
(4) The packing of goods, freight etc.
(5) A finished product contained in a unit that is
suitable for immediate installation and operation, as a power or heating unit.
(6) A group, combination, or series of related parts or
elements to be accepted or rejected as a single unit.
(7) A complete program produced for the theater,
television, etc or a series of these, sold as a unit.
(8) In computing, a set of programs designed for a
specific type of problem in statistics, production control etc, making it
unnecessary for a separate program to be written for each problem.
(9) In computing, software distributed with a (sometimes
optional) routine which enables a number of components to be installed and
configured in the one action, meaning the end-user doesn’t have to be
acquainted with pre-requisites, co-requisites etc.
(10) In computing, an alternative name for a “software
suite” which provides a structured installation and configuration of what are
(historically or nominally) separate programs.
(11) In vulgar slang, the male genitalia.
(12) To make or put into a package.
(13) To design and manufacture a package for (a product
or series of related products).
(14) To group or combine (a series of related parts) into
a single unit.
(15) To combine the various elements of (a tour,
entertainment, etc.) for sale as a unit.
1530s: The original form of the word was in the sense of “the
act of packing”, either as the construct of the noun pack + -age or from the cognate
Dutch pakkage (baggage). Pack was from the Middle English pak & pakke, from the Old English pæcca
and/or the Middle Dutch pak & packe, both ultimately from the Proto-West
Germanic pakkō, from the Proto-Germanic
pakkô (bundle, pack). It was cognate with the Dutch pak (pack), the Low German & German Pack (pack), the Swedish packe (pack) and the Icelandic pakka & pakki (package). The
suffix -age was from the Middle English -age,
from the Old French -age, from the
Latin -āticum. Cognates include the French -age, the Italian -aggio, the Portuguese -agem,
the Spanish -aje & Romanian -aj.
It was used to form nouns (1) with the sense of collection or
appurtenance, (2) indicating a process, action, or a result, (3) of a state or
relationship, (4) indicating a place, (5) indicating a charge, toll, or fee,
(6) indicating a rate & (7) of a unit of measure. The familiar modern sense of
“a bundle, a parcel, a quantity pressed or packed together” dates from 1722
while that creation of modern commerce, the “package deal” (a transaction
agreed to as a whole) emerged in 1952.
As a verb meaning “to bundle up into a pack or package” it was in use by
at least 1915 and was a development of the noun. The noun packaging (act of making into a
package or packages) seems to have come into use in 1875. Derived forms are created as needed (mispackage,
subpackage, repackage, unpackage et al). As a modifier, package is now most
associated with the “package deal” in its many advertised forms (package
holiday, package saver, package tour et al).
Package & packaging are nouns & verbs, packager is a noun, packaged
is a verb and packageable is an adjective; the noun plural is packages.
DVD Package deal.
The concept of the "package deal" is to sell two or more items at a list price which is less than the total nominal value. It's used for a variety of purposes, often to use a popular product to shift surplus copies of one less successful. It's a popular concept but does need to be done with care. In 2014, Apple did a deal with the Irish rock band U2 which for many iTunes users had the consequence of an unrequested downloading to their devices the band's latest album. Many people take pop music very seriously and were apparently offended by the notion of an unwanted album by a boomer band being forced upon them. Apple haven't since repeated the packaging experience.
Detroit, the option lists and the packages
1967 Chevrolet Impala SS 327.
When
in the late 1950s computers migrated from the universities and defense industries
to commerce, among the early adopters were the US car manufacturers; they found
intriguing the notion that with a computerized system in place, each vehicle could
be built to a customer’s individual order.
This had of course for decades been done by low-volume manufacturers catering
to the upper class but the administrative and logistical challenges of doing it
at scale on a rapidly moving production line had precluded the approach for the
mass-market. Computerization changed
that and what happened was: (1) a customer visited a dealer and ticked what they
wanted from what suddenly became a long and expanding options list, (2) the
dealer forwarded the list (on paper) to the manufacturers central production
office (CPO) where, (3) a data entry operator typed the information into a
machine which stored it on a punch card which (4) subsequently produced (on
paper) a “build sheet” which went to the assembly line foreman who ensured his
workers produced each car in accordance with its build sheet.
Option list for 1967 full-size Chevrolet range (Biscayne, Bel Air, Impala & Caprice).
The
system actually worked and within its parameters was efficient but accountants
were not impressed by the complexity and while they acknowledged a system with
dozens of options per model could be
done, they said it shouldn’t be done
because it would be more profitable to assemble often-ordered combinations of
options into a bundle which could be sold as a package. What this meant was production runs would
become more efficient because thousands of identically configured cars could be
made, reducing the chance of error and avoiding the need for each line to be
supplied with optional parts not included in the set specification. The other attraction was that people would
end up paying for things they might not have wanted, simply because the “package”
was the only way to get the stuff really desired. The classic examples was the various “executive”
packages which included power-steering, automatic transmission and air-conditioning
and some packages proved so popular they were sometimes further commoditized by
becoming a stand-alone model such as Chevrolet’s Caprice which had in 1965
begun life as a bundle of “luxury” items (packaged as Regular Production Option
(RPO) Z18 for the Impala) before the next year becoming a separate model designation which
wasn’t finally retired until 2017. Under
the pressure of (1) packaging and (2) increasing levels of standard equipment,
the option lists shrunk in the 1970s and were soon trimmed to a handful of
items, most of them fitted by dealers rather than installed by the factory.
Care packages
Care packages were originally a private initiative of US
based charities which organized the assembly of items (with an emphasis on food-stuffs
with a long shelf-life which didn’t demand refrigeration) which could be
shipped to Europe to aid the civilian population, many of who were malnourished
in the aftermath of the war. Initial discussions
focused on post-war planning were held in 1944 and CARE was formed late the
next year, the first shipment of packages beginning in the second quarter of
1946, one of the early sources of supply the large stockpile of Army
ration-packs which were produced for the amphibious invasion of the Japanese
mainland but never used because the conflict was ended by the use of atomic
bombs. What CARE shipped was an example
of the use of the adjective pre-packaged (packaged at the site of production),
a form which is documented from 1944 although the date is coincidental to the
formation of CARE. The name was
originally an acronym: Cooperative
for American Remittances to Europe,
but in 1959, reflecting what for some time had been the reality of CARE’s operations,
it was changed to Cooperative for American Relief Everywhere. In 1993 it was again changed to Cooperative for Assistance and Relief Everywhere, cognizant both of what
would now be called “political optics” and the organization’s now international
structure.
North Korean Freedom Coalition care package price list.
News that Kim Jong-un (Kim III, b 1982; Supreme Leader of
DPRK (North Korea) since 2011) had banned Christmas in the DPRK so upset Christian
activists that they redoubled their efforts to undermine the regime,
advertising a list of “care packages” which could be launched into the Yellow
Sea in bottles, the currents carrying them to the shores of the hermit kingdom,
good Christian folk encouraged to donate between US$17 (which buys a small,
concealable Bible) and US$1500 (a cell phone including roaming charges). The activists operate from the Washington, DC-based
North Korean Freedom Coalition (NKFC) which, in addition to challenging the “godless”
Supreme Leader with teachings from Jesus, hopes practical care packages containing
items such as shortwave radios and propaganda leaflets will destabilize the Kim
dynasty. The NKFC call the strategy “Operation
Truth” and say it's modeled on the Berlin Airlift (1948-1949) which forced the
Soviet Union to lift its blockade of West Berlin. The most obviously practical of the packages
contain enough rice to feed a family of four for a week, as well as a Bible on
a flash drive and a US$1 bill, a much-sought after item in the DPRK. In a clever twist which turns post-modernism
against itself, the USB flash drives contain some North Korean music but with
the lyrics altered from singing the praises of Kim Jong-un to lines worshiping God. Decadent K-Pop songs are also loaded but the
content of those (like the US movies also included) will be carefully checked
to ensure nothing un-Christian is shipped.
Those who provided recorded messages included senators Jim Risch and Tim
Kaine, & representatives Michael McCaul and Gregory Meeks; as if K-Pop
wasn’t bad enough, that does sound like “cruel and unusual punishment”. The packages are being supported by Fox News,
the audience of which hates communists, atheists, Kim Jong-un and Joe Biden.
Moved to tears: The Supreme Leader sobbing when thinking of the lack of fecundity among his women, Pyongyang, December 2023.
One who may deserve a care package is the Supreme Leader
himself who recently was moved to tears as he implored his faithful female subjects
to have more babies and raise them to love their country. Kim Jong-un was filmed daubing is eyes with
an immaculately pressed white handkerchief while addressing thousands of women
gathered at a national mothers meeting in Pyongyang, the first such assembly in
over a decade and one convened amid rising concerns over a fall in the DPRK’s
birth rate. “Stopping the decline in
birthrates and providing good child care and education are all our family
affairs that we should solve together with our mothers” the Supreme Leader was
quoted as saying and with a rumored three children, he’s certainly done his
bit. Kim II went on to remind mothers
their “primary revolutionary task” was to drill “socialist virtues” into their
offspring and instil loyalty to the ruling party, adding that “…unless a
mother becomes a communist, it is impossible for her to bring up her sons and
daughters as communists and transform the members of her family into
revolutionaries”. Possibly fearing how
they might be led astray by listening either to K-Pop or Senator Tim Kane, he
warned the adoring women to be vigilant about any foreign
influence on young minds, telling them to send their children to perform hard
labour for the state to correct bad behaviour that is not “our style”. The demographic problem isn’t restricted to the DPRK; in
the region, policy-makers in both Japan and the RoK (the Republic of Korea (South
Korea)) are also alarmed at the increasingly flaccid trend-line of population growth
but for the DPRK, with its reliance on manual labour and military service,
things rapidly could deteriorate.
Package deal: With every election of Bill Clinton, voters received a free copy of crooked Hillary.There were suggestions the dictatorial tears were an
indication of the uniqueness of the crisis and while it was true the dynasty
had no tradition of lachrymosity, neither Kim Il-sung (Kim I, 1912–1994; Great
Leader of DPRK (North Korea) 1948-1994) nor Kim Jong-il (Kim II, 1941-2011;
Dear Leader of DPRK (North Korea) 1994-2011) ever having been seen crying but Kim Jong-un had shed a public tear in the past: In 2020, he
cried as he issued an apology for failing to guide the reclusive country
through turbulent economic times at the outset of the COVID-19 pandemic. So unexpected and unusual were the words of
regret that the tears weren’t widely reported but at the military parade held
in July 2023 to mark the 70th anniversary of the end of the Korean War that divided
the peninsula, the Supreme Leader proved he could also shed tears of joy, his
eyes watering as the big missiles passed under his gaze.