Dictionary Definition
xerox
Noun
1 a copy made by the xerox process [syn: xerox
copy]
2 duplicator that copies graphic matter by the
action of light on an electrically charged photoconductive
insulating surface in which the latent image is developed with a
resinous powder [syn: xerographic
copier, Xerox
machine] v : reproduce by xerography [syn: photocopy, run off]
User Contributed Dictionary
see xerox
English
Etymology
xerography < Greek xero meaning “dry” and graphy meaning “writing”Proper noun
Xerox- Xerox Corporation, a global document management company.
- Xerox PARC, the former name of the Palo Alto Research Company, a research and development company founded in 1970 in Palo Alto, best known for the invention of the laser printer, Ethernet and the graphical user interface.
Noun
- A Xerox brand photocopier.
- Our new photocopying machine is a Xerox.
Derived terms
Translations
photocopier- Bulgarian: ксерокс
- Dutch: fotokopieerapparaat
- Interlingua: photocopiator, xeroxator
- Spanish: fotocopiador, xeroxeador
- Portuguese: :pt:fotocopiadora, :pt:xerox
Extensive Definition
Xerox Corporation (nyse XRX) (name ) is a
global document management company, which manufactures and sells a
range of color and black-and-white printers,
multifunction systems, photo
copiers, digital production printing presses, and related
consulting services and supplies. Xerox is headquartered in
Norwalk,
Connecticut (moved from Stamford,
Connecticut in October 2007), though its largest population of
employees is based in and around Rochester,
New York, the area in which the company was founded.
History
Xerox was founded in 1906 as "The Haloid Company", which originally manufactured photographic paper and equipment. The company subsequently changed its name to "Haloid Xerox" in 1958 and then simply "Xerox" in 1961 . The company came to prominence in 1959 with the introduction of the first plain paper photocopier using the process of xerography (electrophotography) developed by Chester Carlson, the Xerox 914 http://americanhistory.si.edu/collections/object.cfm?key=35&objkey=191. The 914 was so popular that by the end of 1961, Xerox had almost $60 million in revenue. By 1965, revenues leaped to over $500 million. Before releasing the 914, Xerox had also introduced the first xerographic printer, the "Copyflo" in 1955.The company expanded substantially throughout the
1960s, making millionaires of some
long-suffering investors who had nursed the company through the
slow research and development phase of the product. In 1960, the
"Wilson Center for Research and Technology" was opened in Webster,
New York, a research facility for xerography. In 1961, the
company changed its name to "Xerox Corporation". Xerox common stock
(XRX) was listed on the New
York Stock Exchange in 1961 and on the Chicago
Stock Exchange in 1990.
In 1963, Xerox introduced the Xerox 813, the
first desktop plain-paper copier, bringing Carlson's vision of a
copier that could fit on anyone's office desk into a reality. Ten
years later in 1973, a color copier followed.
The laser
printer was invented in 1969 by Xerox researcher Gary
Starkweather by modifying a Xerox copier. This development
resulted in the first commercially available laser printer, the
Xerox
9700, being launched in 1977. Laser printing eventually became
a multi billion dollar business for Xerox.
In 1970, under company president Charles
Peter McColough, Xerox opened the Xerox PARC
(Xerox Palo Alto Research Center) research facility. The facility
developed many modern computing methods such as the mouse
and the graphical
user interface. From these inventions, Xerox PARC created the
Xerox
Alto in 1973, a small minicomputer similar to a workstation and personal
computer. The Alto was never commercially sold, as Xerox itself
could not see the sales potential of it. In 1979, several Apple
Computer employees, including Steve Jobs,
visited Xerox PARC, interested in seeing their developments. Jobs
and the others saw the commercial potential of the GUI and mouse,
and began development of the Apple Lisa,
which Apple introduced in 1983.
Xerox later released a similar system to the
Alto, the Xerox Star in
1981 as a workstation. It was the first commercial system to
incorporate various technologies that today have become commonplace
in personal computers, including a bit-mapped display, a
window-based GUI, mouse, Ethernet
networking, file servers,
print
servers and e-mail. The Xerox
Star, despite its technological breakthroughs, did not sell well
due to its high price, costing $16,000 per unit. A typical Xerox
Star-based office would have cost $100,000.
In the mid 80s, Apple
considered buying Xerox; however, a deal was never reached. Apple
attempted to adapt the graphical user interface and mouse to a more
affordable personal computer, aimed towards the business and
education markets. The Apple
Macintosh was released in 1984, and was the first personal
computer to popularize the GUI and mouse amongst the public. In the
late 1980s, Xerox sued Apple over their use of the graphical user
interface. The Xerox case was dismissed because the three year
statute of limitations had passed -- Xerox had waited too long to
file a suit.
The company was revived in the 1980s and 1990s,
through improvement in quality design and realignment of its
product line. Development of digital photocopiers in the 1990s and
a revamp of the entire product range—essentially high-end
laser printers with attached scanners which were able to be
attached to computer networks—again gave Xerox a
technical lead over its competitors. Xerox worked to turn its
product into a service, providing a complete "document service" to
companies including supply, maintenance, configuration, and user
support. To reinforce this image, the company introduced a
corporate signature, "The Document Company" above its main logo and
introduced a red "digital X". The "digital X" symbolized the
transition of documents between the paper and digital worlds.
In 2000, Xerox acquired Tektronix color
printing and imaging division in Wilsonville, Oregon, for US$925
million. This led to the current Xerox Phaser
line of products as well as Xerox solid ink
printing technology.
In September 2004, Xerox celebrated the 45th
anniversary of the Xerox 914. More than 200,000 units were made
around the world between 1959 and 1976, the year production of the
914 was stopped. Today, the 914 is part of American
history as an artifact in the Smithsonian
Institution.
Xerox's turnaround was largely led by Anne M.
Mulcahy, who was appointed president in May 2000, CEO in August
2001 and chairman in January 2002. Mulcahy launched an aggressive
turnaround plan that returned Xerox to full-year profitability by
the end of 2002, along with decreasing debt, increasing cash, and
continuing to invest in research and development.
In November, 2006 Xerox completed the Acquisition
of XMPie
Press
Release
Current products
Xerox today manufactures and sells a wide variety of office and production equipment including photo copiers, Xerox Phaser printers, multifunction printers, large-volume digital printers as well as workflow software under the brand strategy of FreeFlow. The impact of Xerox FreeFlow products on the graphic arts market and the print industry in general has grown exponentially since May 2006, largely as a result of the Xerox presence at IPEX 2006. Xerox also sells scanners and digital presses.Xerox sells both color and black and white
printers under the Xerox Phaser
brand, with the color consumer model starting at US$299; the most
expensive color model costs US$6,799.
Xerox also produces fax machines,
professional printers, black
and white copiers, and several other products.
In addition, Xerox produces many printing and
office supplies such as paper, in many forms; and markets
software such as DocuShare Xerox MarketPort and FlowPort, offers
consulting services,
ECM Digital
Repository Services and printing outsourcing.
Corporate structure
Although Xerox is a global brand, it maintains a joint venture, Fuji Xerox, with Japanese photographic firm Fuji Photo Film Co. to develop, produce and sell in the Asia-Pacific region. Fuji Photo Film Co. is currently the majority stakeholder, with 75% of the shareholding.Xerox India,
formerly Modi Xerox, is Xerox's Indian subsidiary derived from a
joint venture formed between Dr Bhupendra Kumar Modi and Rank Xerox
in 1983. Xerox obtained a majority stake in 1999 and aims to buy
out the remaining shareholders.
Xerox now sponsors the Factory Ducati Team in the
World Superbike Championship, under the name of the "Xerox
Ducati".
Rank Xerox
European operations, Rank Xerox, later extended to Asia and Africa, has been fully owned by Xerox Corporation since 1997. The Rank Xerox name was discontinued following the buyout.Environmental Record
U.S. office workers print an average of 10,000 pages per year. According to Xerox, around 40 percent of the pages printed out by people are only viewed once before being thrown away. Xerox is making attempts at reducing that number with “erasable paper.” This new type of paper is embedded with chemicals that are sensitive to light. When different wavelengths of light touch its surface, the paper darkens, and this in turn gives the “printed text or image” look. The images stay on the paper for between 16 and 24 hours before dissolving, and this allows the paper to be used again in the future.The average American emits 9.44 tons of carbon
dioxide a year. To help offices realize their environmental impact,
Xerox released the “sustainability calculator” in late March 2008.
The calculator has been created as a method to measure “the
environmental benefits so we can use that in our reports and
marketing materials” says Patty Calkins, who is the vice president
of environment, health, and safety at Xerox, as well as to optimize
the office equipment.
Accounting irregularities
On April 11, 2002, the Securities and Exchange Commission filed a complaint against Xerox. The complaint alleged Xerox deceived the public between 1997 and 2000 by employing several "accounting maneuvers," the most significant of which was a change in when Xerox recorded revenue from copy machine leases — recognizing a "sale" in the period a lease contract was signed, instead of recognizing revenue ratably over the entire length of the contract. At issue was when the revenue was recognized, not the validity of the revenue. Xerox's restatement only changed what year the revenue was stated.In response to the SEC's complaint, Xerox
Corporation neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing. It agreed to
pay a $10 million penalty and to restate its financial results for
the years 1997 through 2000. On June 5, 2003, six Xerox senior
executives accused of securities fraud settled their issues with
the SEC and neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing. They agreed to
pay $22 million in penalties, disgorgement, and interest.
On January 29,
2003, the SEC
filed a complaint against Xerox's auditors , KPMG, alleging four
partners in the "Big Five" accounting firm permitted Xerox to "cook
the books" to fill a $3 billion "gap" in revenue and $1.4 billion
"gap" in pre-tax earnings. In April 2005 KPMG settled with the SEC
by paying a US$22.48 million fine . As part of the settlement KPMG
neither admits nor denies wrongdoing.
During settlement with the
Securities and Exchange Commission, Xerox began to revamp
itself once more. As a symbol of this transformation, the relative
size of the word "Xerox" was increased in proportion to "The
Document Company" on the corporate signature and the latter was
dropped altogether in September 2004, along with the digital X.
However, the digital X and "The Document Company" are still used by
Fuji
Xerox.
Trademark issues and name usage
The word "xerox" is commonly used as a synonym for "photocopy" (both as a noun and a verb) in many areas; for example,"I xeroxed the document and placed it on your desk." or "Please make a xeroxed copy of the articles and hand them out a week before the exam". Though both are common, the company does not condone such uses of its trademark, and is particularly concerned about the ongoing use of Xerox as a verb as this places the trademark in danger of being declared a generic word by the courts. The company is engaged in an ongoing advertising and media campaign to convince the public that Xerox should not be used as a verb.To this end, the company has written to
publications that have used Xerox as a verb, and has also purchased
print advertisements declaring that "you cannot 'xerox' a document,
but you can copy it on a Xerox Brand copying machine". (Note that
xerox is functionally a verb in this sentence.) Xerox Corporation
continues to protect its trademark diligently in most if not all
trademark categories. Despite their efforts, many dictionaries
continue to mention the use of "xerox" as a verb, including the
Oxford English Dictionary.
In 2008, Xerox changed its logo to a red sphere with a white X with
three grey stripes. The change is meant to reflect less on the
photo copying duties Xerox has carried out and instead to refocus
on document management and solutions across the world for
companies.
External links
References
Xerox in Arabic: زيروكس
Xerox in Czech: Xerox
Xerox in Danish: Xerox
Xerox in German: Xerox
Xerox in Spanish: Xerox
Xerox in French: Xerox
Xerox in Indonesian: Xerox
Xerox in Italian: Xerox Corporation
Xerox in Georgian: ქსეროქსი
Xerox in Dutch: Xerox
Xerox in Japanese: ゼロックス
Xerox in Norwegian: Xerox
Xerox in Polish: Xerox
Xerox in Portuguese: Xerox
Xerox in Romanian: Xerox
Xerox in Russian: Xerox
Xerox in Simple English: Xerox
Xerox in Finnish: Xerox
Xerox in Swedish: Xerox
Xerox in Turkish: Xerox
Xerox in Chinese: 施乐
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Ditto copy, Photostat, X-ray, Xerox copy,
blowup, blueprint, calotype, capture on film,
clone, contact print,
contact printing, copy,
cyanotype, ditto, double, dupe, duplicate, enlargement, facsimile, film, glossy, hectograph, hectograph copy,
hologram, impress, impression, lantern slide,
manifold, matte, microcopy, microfilm, microprint, mimeo, mimeograph, mimeograph copy,
mug, multigraph, negative, offprint, pan, photocopy, photograph, photogravure, photomap, photostatic copy,
positive, print, projection printing,
proof, quadruplicate, radiograph, reduplicate, replicate, reprint, reproduce, roentgenograph,
semi-matte, shoot,
slide, snap, snapshoot, snapshot, stat, take a photograph, talbotype, trace, transcribe, transparency, triplicate