even before "matic" was the thing, we had the "ola's" for instance:
"Motorola" car radios, and
"rock-ola" jukeboxes
I can think of a few "matics" that I like too.
"Veg-o-matic" everyone remebers those!
"U-Matic" VCR's by sony (refers to the shape of the tape path within the deck)
"Bunn-o-matic" coffee makers...a personal favorite funny name for me!
A prefix that became popular in the fifties and sixties with the advent of television was "tele". You had:
"Telechron" clocks in many of our vintage appliances
"Telecaster" guitars by Fender
"Tele-Games" by Sears (Atari 2600 clone)
...and you can't forget "Tele-tubbies"
In the eighties, electronics were big, and "tronic" became a popular suffix to names.
"audiotronics" record players in the classroom
"touch-tronic" programmable sewing machines from singer
"keytronic" typewriters and computer keyboards
"tip-tronic" transmissions in BMW's
"autotronic" headlight dimmers
In the ninties, we now have E-this and I-that. It all started with E-mail, and then came Apple computer's "I-Mac". "E" meaning electronic, and "I" meaning internet.
"I-books, I-pods, I-tunes" and other "I" stuff from apple
"I-power" engines in Toyotas
"E-machines" from Gateway computer
"E-control" from Crestron (home automation company)
BTW...the Hydra-matic was GM's transmission, Chrysler's was the "torque-flite" controlled by the famous pushbutton shifter