By 1992 technology had improved. Allen Stoltzfus founded Fairfield Language Technologies in Harrisonburg, Virginia, and became the company’s Chairman and President. He recruited his brother, Eugene Stoltzfus, to be Fairfield’s Executive Vice President. Eugene had a background in architecture and he contributed his expertise in designing the program’s appearance and organization. Allen and Eugene Stoltzfus, along with John Fairfield, named their product Rosetta Stone, after the artifact that served as the key to understanding Egyptian hieroglyphics. Like the artifact, their product was meant to unlock language-learning success.