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Wikipedia

Xerox

Xerox Holdings Corporation (/ˈzɪərɒks/; also known simply as Xerox) is an American corporation that sells print and digital document products and services in more than 160 countries.[3] Xerox is headquartered in Norwalk, Connecticut (having moved from Stamford, Connecticut, in October 2007),[4] though it is incorporated in New York[5] with its largest population of employees based around Rochester, New York, the area in which the company was founded. The company purchased Affiliated Computer Services for $6.4 billion in early 2010.[6] As a large developed company, it is consistently placed in the list of Fortune 500 companies.[7]

Xerox Holdings Corporation
Former Xerox headquarters in Norwalk
FormerlyHaloid Photographic Company
TypePublic
IndustryInformation technology
FoundedApril 18, 1906; 117 years ago (1906-04-18)
Rochester, New York, U.S.
FoundersJoseph C. Wilson
Chester Carlson
Headquarters,
U.S.
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
  • Keith Cozza
    (Chairman)
  • Steve Bandrowczak
    (interim CEO)
ProductsOffice printers, production printers & digital presses, multi-function printers, wide format printers, projectors, scanners copiers, and other office equipment
ServicesDocument services
Revenue US$7.11 billion (2022)
US$−328 million (2022)
US$−322 million (2022)
Total assets US$11.54 billion (2022)
Total equity US$3.34 billion (2022)
Number of employees
20,500 (2022)
Subsidiaries
Websitexerox.com
Footnotes / references
[1][2]

On December 31, 2016, Xerox separated its business process service operations, essentially those operations acquired with the purchase of Affiliated Computer Services, into a new publicly traded company, Conduent. Xerox focuses on its document technology and document outsourcing business, and traded on the NYSE from 1961 to 2021, and the Nasdaq since 2021.[8]

Researchers at Xerox and its Palo Alto Research Center invented several important elements of personal computing, such as the desktop metaphor GUI, the computer mouse[9] and desktop computing.[10] The concepts were adopted by Apple Inc. and later Microsoft.

History

Xerox was founded in 1906 in Rochester, New York, as The Haloid Photographic Company.[11] It manufactured photographic paper and equipment.

In 1938, Chester Carlson, a physicist working independently, invented a process for printing images using an electrically charged photoconductor-coated metal plate[12] and dry powder "toner". However, it would take more than 20 years of refinement before the first automated machine to make copies was commercialized, using a document feeder, scanning light, and a rotating drum.

Joseph C. Wilson, credited as the "founder of Xerox", took over Haloid from his father. He saw the promise of Carlson's invention and, in 1946, signed an agreement to develop it as a commercial product. Wilson remained as President/CEO of Xerox until 1967 and served as chairman until his death in 1971.

Looking for a term to differentiate its new system, Haloid hired a Greek scholar at Ohio State University and coined the term xerography from two Greek roots meaning "dry writing".[13] Haloid changed its name to Haloid Xerox in 1958 and then Xerox Corporation in 1961.[14]

Before releasing the 914, Xerox tested the market by introducing a developed version of the prototype hand-operated equipment known as the Flat-plate 1385. The 1385 was not actually a viable copier because of its slowness of operation. As a consequence, it was sold as a platemaker for the Addressograph-Multigraph Multilith 1250 and related sheet-fed offset printing presses in the offset lithography market. It was little more than a high quality, commercially available plate camera mounted as a horizontal rostrum camera, complete with photo-flood lighting and timer. The glass film/plate had been replaced with a selenium-coated aluminum plate. Clever electrics turned this into a quick-developing and reusable substitute for film. A skilled user could produce fast, paper and metal printing plates of a higher quality than almost any other method. Having started as a supplier to the offset lithography duplicating industry, Xerox now set its sights on capturing some of offset's market share.

The 1385 was followed by the first automatic xerographic printer, the Copyflo, in 1955. The Copyflo was a large microfilm printer that could produce positive prints on roll paper from any type of microfilm negative. Following the Copyflo, the process was scaled down to produce the 1824 microfilm printer. At about half the size and weight, this still sizable machine printed onto hand-fed, cut-sheet paper which was pulled through the process by one of two gripper bars. A scaled-down version of this gripper feed system was to become the basis for the 813 desktop copier.

Xerox 914

The company came to prominence in 1959 with the introduction of the Xerox 914,[15] "the most successful single product of all time." The 914, the first plain paper photocopier, was developed by Carlson and John H. Dessauer;[16] it was so popular that by the end of 1961 Xerox had almost $60 million in revenue. The product was sold by an innovative ad campaign showing that even monkeys could make copies at the touch of a button - simplicity would become the foundation of Xerox products and user interfaces. Revenues leaped to over $500 million by 1965.

Xeronic Computer Printer

In 1956, Haloid formed a joint venture in the UK with Rank Organisation whose Rank Precision Industries Ltd. subsidiary was charged with anglicising the US products. Rank's Precision Industries went on to develop the Xeronic computer printer and Rank Data Systems Ltd was set up to bring the product to market. It used cathode ray tubes to generate the characters and forms that could be overlaid from microfilm images. Initially, they planned for the Ferranti and AEI computer companies to sell the Xeronic as an on-line peripheral, but due to interface problems, Rank switched to a magnetic tape off-line technique. In 1962, Lyons Computers Ltd. placed an order for use with their LEO III computer, and the printer was delivered in 1964. It printed 2,888 lines per minute, slower than the target of 5,000 lpm.[17]

1960s

In the 1960s, Xerox held a dominant position in the photocopier market.[18] In 1960, a xerography research facility called the Wilson Center for Research and Technology was opened in Webster, New York. In 1961, the company changed its name to Xerox Corporation.[19] Xerox common stock (XRX) was listed on the New York Stock Exchange in 1961[20] and on the Chicago Stock Exchange in 1990.

In 1963, Xerox introduced the Xerox 813, the first desktop plain-paper copier, realizing Carlson's vision of a copier that could fit on anyone's office desk. Ten years later, in 1973, a basic, analogue, color copier, based on the 914, followed. The 914 itself was gradually sped up to become the 420 and 720. The 813 was similarly developed into the 330 and 660 products and, eventually, also the 740 desktop microfiche printer.

Xerox's first foray into duplicating, as distinct from copying, was with the Xerox 2400, introduced in 1966. The model number denoted the number of prints produced in an hour. Although not as fast as offset printing, this machine introduced the industry's first automatic document feeder, paper slitter and perforator, and collator (sorter). This product was soon sped up by fifty percent to become the Xerox 3600 Duplicator.

Meanwhile, a small lab team was borrowing 914 copiers and modifying them. The lab was developing what it called long distance xerography (LDX) to connect two copiers using the public telephone network, so that a document scanned on one machine would print out on the other. The LDX system was introduced in 1964, followed in 1966 by the Magnafax Telecopier, a much smaller version. However, fax machines would not become a truly mainstream device until the 1980s.

In 1968, C. Peter McColough, a longtime executive of Haloid and Xerox, became Xerox's CEO.[21] The same year, the company consolidated its headquarters at Xerox Square in downtown Rochester, New York, with its 30-story Xerox Tower.[22]

Xerox embarked on a series of acquisitions. It purchased University Microfilms International in 1962, Electro-Optical Systems in 1963,[23] and R. R. Bowker in 1967. In 1969, Xerox acquired Scientific Data Systems (SDS),[24] which it renamed the Xerox Data Systems (XDS) division and which produced the Sigma line and its successor XDS 5xx series of mainframe computers in the 1960s and 1970s. Xerox sold XDS to Honeywell in 1975.

1970s

Archie McCardell was named president of the company in 1971.[25] During his tenure, Xerox introduced the Xerox 6500, its first color copier.[26] During McCardell's reign at Xerox, the company announced record revenues, earnings and profits in 1973, 1974, and 1975.[27] John Carrol became a backer, later spreading the company throughout North America.[citation needed]

In the mid-1970s, Xerox introduced the "Xerox 9200 Duplicating System". Originally designed to be sold to print shops to increase their productivity, it was twice a fast as the 3600 duplicator at two impressions per second (7200 per hour). It was followed by the 9400, which did auto-duplexing, and then by the 9500, which was which added variable zoom reduction and electronic lightness/darkness control.[citation needed]

In a 1975 Super Bowl commercial for the 9200, Xerox debuted an advertising campaign featuring "Brother Dominic", a monk who used the 9200 system to save decades of manual copying.[28] Before it was aired, there was some concern that the commercial would be denounced as blasphemous. However, when the commercial was screened for the Archbishop of New York, he found it amusing and gave it his blessing.[29] Dominic, portrayed by Jack Eagle, became the face of Xerox into the 1980s.[30]

Following these years of record profits, in 1975, Xerox resolved an anti-trust suit with the United States Federal Trade Commission (FTC), which at the time was under the direction of Frederic M. Scherer. The Xerox consent decree resulted in the forced licensing of the company's entire patent portfolio, mainly to Japanese competitors. Within four years of the consent decree, Xerox's share of the U.S. copier market dropped from nearly 100% to less than 14%.[31]

In 1979, Xerox purchased Western Union International (WUI) as the basis for its proposed Xerox Telecommunications Network (XTEN) for local-loop communications. However, after three years, in 1982, the company decided the idea was a mistake and sold its assets to MCI at a loss.[32]

1980s

David T. Kearns, a Xerox executive since 1971, took over as CEO in 1982. The company was revived in the 1980s and 1990s, through improvement in quality design and realignment of its product line. Attempting to expand beyond copiers, in 1981 Xerox introduced a line of electronic memory typewriters, the Memorywriter, which gained 20% market share, mostly at the expense of IBM.[23]

In 1983, Xerox bought Crum & Forster, an insurance company, and formed Xerox Financial Services (XFS) in 1984.[23]

In 1985, Xerox sold all of its publishing subsidiaries including University Microfilms and R. R. Bowker.[33]

The 6500 color copier was also introduced in 1986. The first one was sold in Philadelphia by Jack Schneider.

1990s

 
Xerox "Pixellated X" logo introduced in 1994

In 1990, Paul Allaire, a Xerox executive since 1966, succeeded David Kearns, who had reached mandatory retirement age. Allaire disentangled Xerox from the financial services industry.

The development of digital photocopiers in the 1990s and a revamp of the entire product range again gave Xerox a technical lead over its competitors. In 1990, Xerox released the DocuTech Production Publisher Model 135, ushering in print-on-demand. Digital photocopiers were essentially high-end laser printers with integrated scanners. Soon, additional features such as network printing and faxing were added to many models, known as Multi Function Machines, or just MFMs, which were able to be attached to computer networks. 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 in 1994, "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 April 1999, Allaire was succeeded by Richard Thoman, who had been brought in from IBM in 1997 as president. The first "outsider" to head Xerox, Thoman resigned in 2000.

2000s

After Thoman's resignation, Allaire again resumed the position of CEO and served until the appointment of Anne M. Mulcahy, another long-term Xerox executive.[34] Xerox's turnaround was largely led by Mulcahy, who was appointed president in May 2000, CEO in August 2001 and chairman in January 2002.[35] She 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 2000, Xerox acquired Tektronix color printing and imaging division in Wilsonville, Oregon, for US$925 million.[36][37] 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.

In November 2006, Xerox completed the acquisition of XMPie. XMPie, a provider of software for cross-media, variable data one-to-one marketing,[38] was the first acquisition of Xerox to remain independent entity, as a Xerox company and not a division, and to this day is led by its original founder Jacob Aizikowitz.

In October 2008, Xerox Canada Ltd. was named one of Greater Toronto's Top Employers by Mediacorp Canada Inc., which was announced by the Toronto Star newspaper.[39]

On July 1, 2009, Ursula Burns succeeded Anne Mulcahy as CEO of Xerox. Burns was the first African American woman to head a company the size of Xerox.

On September 28, 2009, Xerox announced the intended acquisition of Affiliated Computer Services, a services and outsourcing company, for $6.4 Billion. The acquisition was completed in February 2010. Xerox said it paid 4.935 Xerox shares and $18.60 cash for each share of ACS, totaling $6.4 billion, or $63.11 a share for the company.[40]

2010s

In May 2011, Xerox acquired NewField IT for an undisclosed sum.[41]

In December 2013, Xerox sold their Wilsonville, Oregon solid ink product design, engineering and chemistry group and related assets previously acquired from Tektronix to 3D Systems for $32.5 million in cash.[42]

In December 2014, Xerox sold the IT Outsourcing business it had acquired in 2009 from Affiliated Computer Services to Atos for $1.05 billion.[43] This move was taken due to the relatively slow growth of this business relative to some other Xerox units.[43]

In January 2016, Xerox—reportedly under pressure from activist shareholder and corporate raider Carl Icahn—announced that by the end of the year it would spin off its business services unit, largely made up of Affiliated Computer Services, into its own publicly traded company. The name and management of the new company had not been determined at the time of the announcement. Icahn will appoint three members of the new company's board of directors, and he will choose a person to advise its search for a CEO.[44] In June, the company announced that the document management business would retain the name Xerox and the new business services company would be named Conduent. It also announced that Ashok Vemuri will serve as Conduent's CEO and that Icahn will control three seats on the new company's board. It continues to seek a CEO for Xerox; in May, Burns announced her intention to step down as CEO but continue as chairman of the document management business.[45] In June 2016, the company announced that Jeff Jacobson will become the new CEO following the completion of the company's planned separation.[46] This became effective in January 2017.[47]

On January 31, 2018, Xerox announced that Fujifilm had agreed to acquire a 50.1% controlling stake in the company for US$6.1 billion, which was to be combined into their existing joint venture Fuji Xerox (having a value of $18 billion post-acquisition).[48][49][50]

On May 1, 2018, it was announced that Chairman Robert Keegan and CEO Jeff Jacobson and four other directors would resign as part of a deal with investors Carl Icahn and Darwin Deason, who had mounted a proxy fight to oppose the Fujifilm deal. On May 4, Xerox backed away from the deal after stipulations about ceasing litigation were not met.[51] Icahn and Deason responded with an open letter to shareholders blaming the board and management.[52] On May 13 a new deal was reached that additionally cancelled the Fujifilm transaction.[53]

In November 2019, Xerox began to pursue a hostile takeover of PC and printer manufacturer HP Inc., declaring its intent to "engage directly" with shareholders after HP rejected two unsolicited bids for the company.[54][55] Xerox stated in January 2020 that it would pursue the replacement of HP's board.[56] HP has criticized the proposed purchase as a "flawed value exchange" based on "overstated synergies", and instituted a shareholder rights plan and other measures designed to quell the bid,[57][58] which the company believed was being orchestrated by Icahn.[56]

2020s

In February 2020, Xerox announced the hiring of Tali Rosman as VP of Xerox's 3D business. She joins Xerox from NICE, where she was vice president and head of business operations for the Americas. She will report to CTO Naresh Shanker.[59]

On March 5, HP revealed that its board of directors has unanimously declined Xerox's $24 a share cash-and-stock offer.[60]

On March 13, Xerox revealed that they are putting their campaign to acquire HP on hold by postponing additional presentations, interviews with the press and meetings with HP shareholders. Xerox Vice Chairman and Chief Executive John Visentin cited the COVID-19 pandemic as a main reason and said, "In light of the escalating Covid-19 pandemic, Xerox needs to prioritize health and safety of its employees, customers, partners and affiliates over and above all considerations, including its proposal to acquire HP."[61]

On March 31, 2020, Xerox abolished its $24 a share offer.[62]

In September 2020, Xerox opened its North Carolina Center of Excellence in Cary, North Carolina.[63] The Center includes the research and development operations, the 3-D printing lab, and th eXerox Digital eXperience IT organization.[63]

In September 2021, Xerox announced it was transferring its stock ticker from the New York Stock Exchange to the Nasdaq after 60 years. The move, as described by Visentin, was to "[challenge] the status quo by developing and leveraging new innovations to create solutions that address major secular challenges across industries", and was viewed as part of Xerox's transition into software. The transfer went into effect on September 21, 2021.[8]

Digital printing

The laser printer was invented in 1969 by Xerox researcher Gary Starkweather by modifying a Xerox 7000 copier. Xerox management was afraid the product version of Starkweather's invention, which became the 9700, would negatively impact their copier business so the innovation sat in limbo until IBM launched the 3800 laser printer in 1976.

The first commercial non-impact printer was the Xerox 1200, introduced in 1973,[64] based on the 3600 copier. It had an optical character generator designed by optical engineer Phil Chen.[65]

In 1977, following IBM's laser printer introduction, the Xerox 9700 was introduced. Laser printing eventually became a multibillion-dollar business[when?] for Xerox.[citation needed]

In the late 1970s, Xerox introduced the "Xerox 350 color slide system." This product allowed the customer to create digital word and graphic 35-millimetre slides. Many of the concepts used in today's "Photo Shop" programs were pioneered with this technology.

In 1980, Xerox announced the 5700 laser printing system, a much smaller version of their 9700, but with revolutionary touch-screen capabilities and multiple media input (word processing disks, IBM magcards, etc.) and printer 'finishing' options. This product was allegedly never intended to make the commercial markets due to its development cost, but rather to show the innovation of Xerox. It took off with many customers, but was soon replaced with its smaller and lower cost Xerox 2700 Distributed Electronic Printer offering in 1982.[66]

Palo Alto Research Center

 
The Xerox Alto workstation was developed at Xerox PARC.

In 1970, under company president C. Peter McColough, Xerox opened the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, known as Xerox PARC. The facility developed many modern computing technologies such as the graphical user interface (GUI), laser printing, WYSIWYG text editors and Ethernet. From these inventions, Xerox PARC created the Xerox Alto in 1973, a small minicomputer similar to a modern workstation or personal computer. This machine can be considered the first true Personal Computer, given its versatile combination of a cathode-ray-type screen, mouse-type pointing device, and a QWERTY-type alphanumeric keyboard. But the Alto was never commercially sold, as Xerox itself could not see the sales potential of it. It was, however, installed in Xerox's own offices, worldwide and those of the US Government and military, who could see the potential. Within these sites the individual workstations were connected together by Xerox's own unique LAN, The Ethernet. Data was sent around this system of heavy, yellow, low loss coaxial cable using the packet data system. In addition, PARC also developed one of the earliest internetworking protocol suites, the PARC Universal Packet (PUP).

In 1979, Steve Jobs made a deal with Xerox's venture capital division: He would let them invest $1 million in exchange for a look at the technology they were working on. Jobs and the others saw the commercial potential of the WIMP (Window, Icon, Menu, and Pointing device) system and redirected development of the Apple Lisa to incorporate these technologies. Jobs is quoted as saying, "They just had no idea what they had." In 1980, Jobs invited several key PARC researchers to join his company so that they could fully develop and implement their ideas.

In 1981, Xerox released a system similar to the Alto, the Xerox Star. It was the first commercial system to incorporate technologies that have subsequently become commonplace in personal computers, such as a bitmapped display, window-based GUI, mouse, Ethernet networking, file servers, print servers and e-mail. The Xerox Star and its successor the Xerox Daybreak, despite their technological breakthroughs, did not sell well due to its high price, costing $16,000 per unit. A typical Xerox Star-based office, complete with network and printers, would have cost $100,000.

In the mid-1980s, Apple considered buying Xerox; however, a deal was never reached.[67][citation needed] Apple instead bought rights to the Alto GUI and adapted it into 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 among the public.

In 2002, PARC was spun off into an independent wholly-owned subsidiary of Xerox. In April 2023, Xerox announced that it would donate the lab and its related assets to SRI International. As part of the deal, Xerox would keep most of the patent rights inside PARC, and benefit from a preferred research agreement with SRI/PARC.[68] [69]

Chief executives

Chief executives
Name Title Tenure Photo
George C. Seager President 1906–1912
Gilbert E. Mosher President 1912–1938
Joseph R. Wilson President 1938–1946
Joseph C. Wilson President
CEO
1946–1966
1961–1967
C. Peter McColough CEO 1968–1982  
David T. Kearns CEO 1982 – July 31, 1990  
Paul A. Allaire CEO August 1, 1990 – April 6, 1999
G. Richard Thoman CEO April 7, 1999 – May 10, 2000
Paul A. Allaire CEO May 11, 2000 – July 31, 2001
Anne M. Mulcahy CEO August 1, 2001 – June 30, 2009
Ursula Burns CEO July 1, 2009 – December 31, 2016  
Jeff Jacobson CEO January 1, 2017 – May 15, 2018
John Visentin Vice Chairman and CEO May 16, 2018 – June 28, 2022[70]
Steve Bandrowczak Vice Chairman and CEO (Interim) June 29, 2022 – present

Products and services

 
Xerox WorkCentre 6605

Xerox manufactures and sells a wide variety of office equipment including scanners, printers, and multifunction systems that scan, print, copy, email and fax. These model families include WorkCentre, Phaser, and ColorQube.[2] For the graphic communications and commercial print industries, the Xerox product portfolio includes high-volume, digital printing presses, production printers, and wide format printers that use xerographic and inkjet printing technologies. Products include the iGen, Nuvera, DocuPrint, and Impika series, as well as the Trivor, iPrint, and Rialto (inkjet) machines.[71]

Corporate structure

 
Xerox logo 1968–2008, designed by Chermayeff & Geismar

Although Xerox is a global brand, it maintained a joint venture from 1962 to 2021, Fuji Xerox, with Japanese photographic firm Fuji Photo Film Co. to develop, produce and sell in the Asia-Pacific region. Fujifilm announced in January 2020 that it would not renew its technology agreement with Xerox, with Fuji Xerox being renamed to Fujifilm Business Innovation in April 2021.[72]

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.[73]

NewField IT is a wholly owned subsidiary of Xerox that implements and supports third-party software for MPS providers.[74]

Xerox now sponsors the Factory Ducati Team in the World Superbike Championship, under the name of the "Xerox Ducati".

Rank Xerox

 
Rank Xerox logo used in 1980s

The European company 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, and the Rank Xerox Research Centre was renamed to the Xerox Research Centre Europe. International Internet company NAVER acquired Xerox Research Centre Europe in June 2017.[75]

Accounting irregularities

On May 31, 2001, Xerox Corporation announced that its auditors, KPMG LLP, had certified Xerox's financial statements for the three years ended December 31, 2000; the financials included some restatements.[76] On March 31, 2002, Xerox restated its financials which reflected the reallocation of equipment sales revenue of more than $2 billion.[77] On April 11, 2002, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filed a complaint against Xerox.[78] 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 which Xerox recorded revenue from copy machine leases – recognizing a "sale" when a lease contract was signed, instead of recognizing revenue 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 recognized. On December 20, 2002, Xerox Corporation reported that it had discovered an error in the calculation of its non-cash interest expense related to a debt instrument and associated interest rate swap agreements, resulted in after-tax understatement of interest expense of approximately $5 million to $6 million or less than 1 cent per share in each of the four quarters of 2001 and for the first three quarters of 2002.[79]

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. The company received approval to settle the securities lawsuit in 2008.[80]

On January 29, 2003, the SEC filed a complaint against Xerox's auditors,[81] 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.[82] Meanwhile, Xerox paid a civil penalty of $10 million.[83] As part of the settlement KPMG neither admits nor denies wrongdoings.

During a 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" were still used by Fuji Xerox until April 2008.

Character substitution bug

In 2013, German computer scientist David Kriesel (de) discovered an error in a Xerox WorkCentre 7535 copier. The device would substitute number digits in scanned documents, even when OCR was turned off. For instance, a cost table in a scanned document had an entry of 85.40, instead of the original sum of 65.40.[84] After unsuccessfully trying to resolve this issue with Xerox's customer support, he publicised his findings on his blog. Providing example pages that would lead to the bug occurring, it was confirmed that this bug was reproducible on a wide variety of Xerox WorkCentre and other high-end Xerox copiers.

The source of the error was a bug in the JBIG2 implementation, which is an image compression standard that makes use of pattern matching to encode identical characters only once. While this provides a high level of compression, it is susceptible to errors in identifying similar characters.

A possible workaround was published by Kriesel, which involved setting the image quality from "normal" to "higher" or "high". Shortly afterwards, it was found that the same fix had been suggested in the printer manual, which mentioned the occurrence of character substitutions in "normal mode", indicating that Xerox was aware of the software error.[85] In Xerox's initial response to a growing interest by the media, the error was described as occurring rarely and only when factory settings had been changed.[86][87] After Kriesel provided evidence that the error was also occurring in all three image quality modes (normal, higher and high) including the factory defaults, Xerox corrected their statement and released a software patch to eliminate the problem.[88][89] Despite the problem being present in some instances also in higher quality mode, Xerox advises users that they can use this mode as an alternative to applying the patch.[90]

Trademark

The word xerox is 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.[91][92]

To this end, the company has written to publications that have used Xerox as a verb. It has also purchased print advertisements using "xerox" as a verb, claiming that "you cannot 'xerox' a document, but you can copy it on a Xerox Brand copying machine". Xerox Corporation continues to protect its trademark in most if not all trademark categories.[citation needed] Despite their efforts, many dictionaries continue to include the use of "xerox" as a verb, including the Oxford English Dictionary. In 2012, the Intellectual Property Appellate Board (IPAB) of India declared "xerox" a non-generic term after "almost 50 years (1963–2009) of continued existence on the register without challenge, and with proof of almost 44 years of use evident (1965–2009)",[93] but as of 2015, most Indians still use it as a synonym for photocopying.[94]

The company has also advertised its trademark concerns, in an attempt to persuade journalists and others not to use "Xerox" as a verb.[95]

See also

Citations

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General references

External links

  • Official website
  • Business data for Xerox:
    • Bloomberg
    • Google
    • SEC filings
    • Yahoo!

xerox, this, article, about, company, photocopying, photocopier, holdings, corporation, ɪər, also, known, simply, american, corporation, that, sells, print, digital, document, products, services, more, than, countries, headquartered, norwalk, connecticut, havi. This article is about the company For photocopying see photocopier Xerox Holdings Corporation ˈ z ɪer ɒ k s also known simply as Xerox is an American corporation that sells print and digital document products and services in more than 160 countries 3 Xerox is headquartered in Norwalk Connecticut having moved from Stamford Connecticut in October 2007 4 though it is incorporated in New York 5 with its largest population of employees based around Rochester New York the area in which the company was founded The company purchased Affiliated Computer Services for 6 4 billion in early 2010 6 As a large developed company it is consistently placed in the list of Fortune 500 companies 7 Xerox Holdings CorporationFormer Xerox headquarters in NorwalkFormerlyHaloid Photographic CompanyTypePublicTraded asNasdaq XRXS amp P 400 componentIndustryInformation technologyFoundedApril 18 1906 117 years ago 1906 04 18 Rochester New York U S FoundersJoseph C WilsonChester CarlsonHeadquartersNorwalk Connecticut U S Area servedWorldwideKey peopleKeith Cozza Chairman Steve Bandrowczak interim CEO ProductsOffice printers production printers amp digital presses multi function printers wide format printers projectors scanners copiers and other office equipmentServicesDocument servicesRevenueUS 7 11 billion 2022 Operating incomeUS 328 million 2022 Net incomeUS 322 million 2022 Total assetsUS 11 54 billion 2022 Total equityUS 3 34 billion 2022 Number of employees20 500 2022 SubsidiariesAffiliated Computer ServicesCareARXerox IndiaWebsitexerox wbr comFootnotes references 1 2 On December 31 2016 Xerox separated its business process service operations essentially those operations acquired with the purchase of Affiliated Computer Services into a new publicly traded company Conduent Xerox focuses on its document technology and document outsourcing business and traded on the NYSE from 1961 to 2021 and the Nasdaq since 2021 8 Researchers at Xerox and its Palo Alto Research Center invented several important elements of personal computing such as the desktop metaphor GUI the computer mouse 9 and desktop computing 10 The concepts were adopted by Apple Inc and later Microsoft Contents 1 History 1 1 Xerox 914 1 2 Xeronic Computer Printer 1 3 1960s 1 4 1970s 1 5 1980s 1 6 1990s 1 7 2000s 1 8 2010s 1 9 2020s 1 10 Digital printing 1 11 Palo Alto Research Center 2 Chief executives 3 Products and services 4 Corporate structure 5 Rank Xerox 6 Accounting irregularities 7 Character substitution bug 8 Trademark 9 See also 10 Citations 11 General references 12 External linksHistory EditXerox was founded in 1906 in Rochester New York as The Haloid Photographic Company 11 It manufactured photographic paper and equipment In 1938 Chester Carlson a physicist working independently invented a process for printing images using an electrically charged photoconductor coated metal plate 12 and dry powder toner However it would take more than 20 years of refinement before the first automated machine to make copies was commercialized using a document feeder scanning light and a rotating drum Joseph C Wilson credited as the founder of Xerox took over Haloid from his father He saw the promise of Carlson s invention and in 1946 signed an agreement to develop it as a commercial product Wilson remained as President CEO of Xerox until 1967 and served as chairman until his death in 1971 Looking for a term to differentiate its new system Haloid hired a Greek scholar at Ohio State University and coined the term xerography from two Greek roots meaning dry writing 13 Haloid changed its name to Haloid Xerox in 1958 and then Xerox Corporation in 1961 14 Before releasing the 914 Xerox tested the market by introducing a developed version of the prototype hand operated equipment known as the Flat plate 1385 The 1385 was not actually a viable copier because of its slowness of operation As a consequence it was sold as a platemaker for the Addressograph Multigraph Multilith 1250 and related sheet fed offset printing presses in the offset lithography market It was little more than a high quality commercially available plate camera mounted as a horizontal rostrum camera complete with photo flood lighting and timer The glass film plate had been replaced with a selenium coated aluminum plate Clever electrics turned this into a quick developing and reusable substitute for film A skilled user could produce fast paper and metal printing plates of a higher quality than almost any other method Having started as a supplier to the offset lithography duplicating industry Xerox now set its sights on capturing some of offset s market share The 1385 was followed by the first automatic xerographic printer the Copyflo in 1955 The Copyflo was a large microfilm printer that could produce positive prints on roll paper from any type of microfilm negative Following the Copyflo the process was scaled down to produce the 1824 microfilm printer At about half the size and weight this still sizable machine printed onto hand fed cut sheet paper which was pulled through the process by one of two gripper bars A scaled down version of this gripper feed system was to become the basis for the 813 desktop copier Xerox 914 Edit Main article Xerox 914 The company came to prominence in 1959 with the introduction of the Xerox 914 15 the most successful single product of all time The 914 the first plain paper photocopier was developed by Carlson and John H Dessauer 16 it was so popular that by the end of 1961 Xerox had almost 60 million in revenue The product was sold by an innovative ad campaign showing that even monkeys could make copies at the touch of a button simplicity would become the foundation of Xerox products and user interfaces Revenues leaped to over 500 million by 1965 Xeronic Computer Printer Edit In 1956 Haloid formed a joint venture in the UK with Rank Organisation whose Rank Precision Industries Ltd subsidiary was charged with anglicising the US products Rank s Precision Industries went on to develop the Xeronic computer printer and Rank Data Systems Ltd was set up to bring the product to market It used cathode ray tubes to generate the characters and forms that could be overlaid from microfilm images Initially they planned for the Ferranti and AEI computer companies to sell the Xeronic as an on line peripheral but due to interface problems Rank switched to a magnetic tape off line technique In 1962 Lyons Computers Ltd placed an order for use with their LEO III computer and the printer was delivered in 1964 It printed 2 888 lines per minute slower than the target of 5 000 lpm 17 1960s Edit In the 1960s Xerox held a dominant position in the photocopier market 18 In 1960 a xerography research facility called the Wilson Center for Research and Technology was opened in Webster New York In 1961 the company changed its name to Xerox Corporation 19 Xerox common stock XRX was listed on the New York Stock Exchange in 1961 20 and on the Chicago Stock Exchange in 1990 In 1963 Xerox introduced the Xerox 813 the first desktop plain paper copier realizing Carlson s vision of a copier that could fit on anyone s office desk Ten years later in 1973 a basic analogue color copier based on the 914 followed The 914 itself was gradually sped up to become the 420 and 720 The 813 was similarly developed into the 330 and 660 products and eventually also the 740 desktop microfiche printer Xerox s first foray into duplicating as distinct from copying was with the Xerox 2400 introduced in 1966 The model number denoted the number of prints produced in an hour Although not as fast as offset printing this machine introduced the industry s first automatic document feeder paper slitter and perforator and collator sorter This product was soon sped up by fifty percent to become the Xerox 3600 Duplicator Meanwhile a small lab team was borrowing 914 copiers and modifying them The lab was developing what it called long distance xerography LDX to connect two copiers using the public telephone network so that a document scanned on one machine would print out on the other The LDX system was introduced in 1964 followed in 1966 by the Magnafax Telecopier a much smaller version However fax machines would not become a truly mainstream device until the 1980s In 1968 C Peter McColough a longtime executive of Haloid and Xerox became Xerox s CEO 21 The same year the company consolidated its headquarters at Xerox Square in downtown Rochester New York with its 30 story Xerox Tower 22 Xerox embarked on a series of acquisitions It purchased University Microfilms International in 1962 Electro Optical Systems in 1963 23 and R R Bowker in 1967 In 1969 Xerox acquired Scientific Data Systems SDS 24 which it renamed the Xerox Data Systems XDS division and which produced the Sigma line and its successor XDS 5xx series of mainframe computers in the 1960s and 1970s Xerox sold XDS to Honeywell in 1975 Xerox Tower in Rochester New York served as headquarters from 1968 to 1969 Stamford Connecticut served as headquarters from 1969 to 2007 Former manufacturing facility in Henrietta New York constructed in the 1960s and sold to Harris RF Communications in 2010 Xerox Canada Head Office at North American Life Centre Xerox Tower North York Ontario Xerox Training Center1970s Edit Archie McCardell was named president of the company in 1971 25 During his tenure Xerox introduced the Xerox 6500 its first color copier 26 During McCardell s reign at Xerox the company announced record revenues earnings and profits in 1973 1974 and 1975 27 John Carrol became a backer later spreading the company throughout North America citation needed In the mid 1970s Xerox introduced the Xerox 9200 Duplicating System Originally designed to be sold to print shops to increase their productivity it was twice a fast as the 3600 duplicator at two impressions per second 7200 per hour It was followed by the 9400 which did auto duplexing and then by the 9500 which was which added variable zoom reduction and electronic lightness darkness control citation needed In a 1975 Super Bowl commercial for the 9200 Xerox debuted an advertising campaign featuring Brother Dominic a monk who used the 9200 system to save decades of manual copying 28 Before it was aired there was some concern that the commercial would be denounced as blasphemous However when the commercial was screened for the Archbishop of New York he found it amusing and gave it his blessing 29 Dominic portrayed by Jack Eagle became the face of Xerox into the 1980s 30 Following these years of record profits in 1975 Xerox resolved an anti trust suit with the United States Federal Trade Commission FTC which at the time was under the direction of Frederic M Scherer The Xerox consent decree resulted in the forced licensing of the company s entire patent portfolio mainly to Japanese competitors Within four years of the consent decree Xerox s share of the U S copier market dropped from nearly 100 to less than 14 31 In 1979 Xerox purchased Western Union International WUI as the basis for its proposed Xerox Telecommunications Network XTEN for local loop communications However after three years in 1982 the company decided the idea was a mistake and sold its assets to MCI at a loss 32 1980s Edit David T Kearns a Xerox executive since 1971 took over as CEO in 1982 The company was revived in the 1980s and 1990s through improvement in quality design and realignment of its product line Attempting to expand beyond copiers in 1981 Xerox introduced a line of electronic memory typewriters the Memorywriter which gained 20 market share mostly at the expense of IBM 23 In 1983 Xerox bought Crum amp Forster an insurance company and formed Xerox Financial Services XFS in 1984 23 In 1985 Xerox sold all of its publishing subsidiaries including University Microfilms and R R Bowker 33 The 6500 color copier was also introduced in 1986 The first one was sold in Philadelphia by Jack Schneider 1990s Edit Xerox Pixellated X logo introduced in 1994 In 1990 Paul Allaire a Xerox executive since 1966 succeeded David Kearns who had reached mandatory retirement age Allaire disentangled Xerox from the financial services industry The development of digital photocopiers in the 1990s and a revamp of the entire product range again gave Xerox a technical lead over its competitors In 1990 Xerox released the DocuTech Production Publisher Model 135 ushering in print on demand Digital photocopiers were essentially high end laser printers with integrated scanners Soon additional features such as network printing and faxing were added to many models known as Multi Function Machines or just MFMs which were able to be attached to computer networks 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 in 1994 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 April 1999 Allaire was succeeded by Richard Thoman who had been brought in from IBM in 1997 as president The first outsider to head Xerox Thoman resigned in 2000 2000s Edit After Thoman s resignation Allaire again resumed the position of CEO and served until the appointment of Anne M Mulcahy another long term Xerox executive 34 Xerox s turnaround was largely led by Mulcahy who was appointed president in May 2000 CEO in August 2001 and chairman in January 2002 35 She 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 2000 Xerox acquired Tektronix color printing and imaging division in Wilsonville Oregon for US 925 million 36 37 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 In November 2006 Xerox completed the acquisition of XMPie XMPie a provider of software for cross media variable data one to one marketing 38 was the first acquisition of Xerox to remain independent entity as a Xerox company and not a division and to this day is led by its original founder Jacob Aizikowitz In October 2008 Xerox Canada Ltd was named one of Greater Toronto s Top Employers by Mediacorp Canada Inc which was announced by the Toronto Star newspaper 39 On July 1 2009 Ursula Burns succeeded Anne Mulcahy as CEO of Xerox Burns was the first African American woman to head a company the size of Xerox On September 28 2009 Xerox announced the intended acquisition of Affiliated Computer Services a services and outsourcing company for 6 4 Billion The acquisition was completed in February 2010 Xerox said it paid 4 935 Xerox shares and 18 60 cash for each share of ACS totaling 6 4 billion or 63 11 a share for the company 40 2010s Edit In May 2011 Xerox acquired NewField IT for an undisclosed sum 41 In December 2013 Xerox sold their Wilsonville Oregon solid ink product design engineering and chemistry group and related assets previously acquired from Tektronix to 3D Systems for 32 5 million in cash 42 In December 2014 Xerox sold the IT Outsourcing business it had acquired in 2009 from Affiliated Computer Services to Atos for 1 05 billion 43 This move was taken due to the relatively slow growth of this business relative to some other Xerox units 43 In January 2016 Xerox reportedly under pressure from activist shareholder and corporate raider Carl Icahn announced that by the end of the year it would spin off its business services unit largely made up of Affiliated Computer Services into its own publicly traded company The name and management of the new company had not been determined at the time of the announcement Icahn will appoint three members of the new company s board of directors and he will choose a person to advise its search for a CEO 44 In June the company announced that the document management business would retain the name Xerox and the new business services company would be named Conduent It also announced that Ashok Vemuri will serve as Conduent s CEO and that Icahn will control three seats on the new company s board It continues to seek a CEO for Xerox in May Burns announced her intention to step down as CEO but continue as chairman of the document management business 45 In June 2016 the company announced that Jeff Jacobson will become the new CEO following the completion of the company s planned separation 46 This became effective in January 2017 47 On January 31 2018 Xerox announced that Fujifilm had agreed to acquire a 50 1 controlling stake in the company for US 6 1 billion which was to be combined into their existing joint venture Fuji Xerox having a value of 18 billion post acquisition 48 49 50 On May 1 2018 it was announced that Chairman Robert Keegan and CEO Jeff Jacobson and four other directors would resign as part of a deal with investors Carl Icahn and Darwin Deason who had mounted a proxy fight to oppose the Fujifilm deal On May 4 Xerox backed away from the deal after stipulations about ceasing litigation were not met 51 Icahn and Deason responded with an open letter to shareholders blaming the board and management 52 On May 13 a new deal was reached that additionally cancelled the Fujifilm transaction 53 In November 2019 Xerox began to pursue a hostile takeover of PC and printer manufacturer HP Inc declaring its intent to engage directly with shareholders after HP rejected two unsolicited bids for the company 54 55 Xerox stated in January 2020 that it would pursue the replacement of HP s board 56 HP has criticized the proposed purchase as a flawed value exchange based on overstated synergies and instituted a shareholder rights plan and other measures designed to quell the bid 57 58 which the company believed was being orchestrated by Icahn 56 2020s Edit In February 2020 Xerox announced the hiring of Tali Rosman as VP of Xerox s 3D business She joins Xerox from NICE where she was vice president and head of business operations for the Americas She will report to CTO Naresh Shanker 59 On March 5 HP revealed that its board of directors has unanimously declined Xerox s 24 a share cash and stock offer 60 On March 13 Xerox revealed that they are putting their campaign to acquire HP on hold by postponing additional presentations interviews with the press and meetings with HP shareholders Xerox Vice Chairman and Chief Executive John Visentin cited the COVID 19 pandemic as a main reason and said In light of the escalating Covid 19 pandemic Xerox needs to prioritize health and safety of its employees customers partners and affiliates over and above all considerations including its proposal to acquire HP 61 On March 31 2020 Xerox abolished its 24 a share offer 62 In September 2020 Xerox opened its North Carolina Center of Excellence in Cary North Carolina 63 The Center includes the research and development operations the 3 D printing lab and th eXerox Digital eXperience IT organization 63 In September 2021 Xerox announced it was transferring its stock ticker from the New York Stock Exchange to the Nasdaq after 60 years The move as described by Visentin was to challenge the status quo by developing and leveraging new innovations to create solutions that address major secular challenges across industries and was viewed as part of Xerox s transition into software The transfer went into effect on September 21 2021 8 Digital printing Edit The laser printer was invented in 1969 by Xerox researcher Gary Starkweather by modifying a Xerox 7000 copier Xerox management was afraid the product version of Starkweather s invention which became the 9700 would negatively impact their copier business so the innovation sat in limbo until IBM launched the 3800 laser printer in 1976 The first commercial non impact printer was the Xerox 1200 introduced in 1973 64 based on the 3600 copier It had an optical character generator designed by optical engineer Phil Chen 65 In 1977 following IBM s laser printer introduction the Xerox 9700 was introduced Laser printing eventually became a multibillion dollar business when for Xerox citation needed In the late 1970s Xerox introduced the Xerox 350 color slide system This product allowed the customer to create digital word and graphic 35 millimetre slides Many of the concepts used in today s Photo Shop programs were pioneered with this technology In 1980 Xerox announced the 5700 laser printing system a much smaller version of their 9700 but with revolutionary touch screen capabilities and multiple media input word processing disks IBM magcards etc and printer finishing options This product was allegedly never intended to make the commercial markets due to its development cost but rather to show the innovation of Xerox It took off with many customers but was soon replaced with its smaller and lower cost Xerox 2700 Distributed Electronic Printer offering in 1982 66 Palo Alto Research Center Edit Main article Xerox PARC The Xerox Alto workstation was developed at Xerox PARC In 1970 under company president C Peter McColough Xerox opened the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center known as Xerox PARC The facility developed many modern computing technologies such as the graphical user interface GUI laser printing WYSIWYG text editors and Ethernet From these inventions Xerox PARC created the Xerox Alto in 1973 a small minicomputer similar to a modern workstation or personal computer This machine can be considered the first true Personal Computer given its versatile combination of a cathode ray type screen mouse type pointing device and a QWERTY type alphanumeric keyboard But the Alto was never commercially sold as Xerox itself could not see the sales potential of it It was however installed in Xerox s own offices worldwide and those of the US Government and military who could see the potential Within these sites the individual workstations were connected together by Xerox s own unique LAN The Ethernet Data was sent around this system of heavy yellow low loss coaxial cable using the packet data system In addition PARC also developed one of the earliest internetworking protocol suites the PARC Universal Packet PUP In 1979 Steve Jobs made a deal with Xerox s venture capital division He would let them invest 1 million in exchange for a look at the technology they were working on Jobs and the others saw the commercial potential of the WIMP Window Icon Menu and Pointing device system and redirected development of the Apple Lisa to incorporate these technologies Jobs is quoted as saying They just had no idea what they had In 1980 Jobs invited several key PARC researchers to join his company so that they could fully develop and implement their ideas In 1981 Xerox released a system similar to the Alto the Xerox Star It was the first commercial system to incorporate technologies that have subsequently become commonplace in personal computers such as a bitmapped display window based GUI mouse Ethernet networking file servers print servers and e mail The Xerox Star and its successor the Xerox Daybreak despite their technological breakthroughs did not sell well due to its high price costing 16 000 per unit A typical Xerox Star based office complete with network and printers would have cost 100 000 In the mid 1980s Apple considered buying Xerox however a deal was never reached 67 citation needed Apple instead bought rights to the Alto GUI and adapted it into 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 among the public In 2002 PARC was spun off into an independent wholly owned subsidiary of Xerox In April 2023 Xerox announced that it would donate the lab and its related assets to SRI International As part of the deal Xerox would keep most of the patent rights inside PARC and benefit from a preferred research agreement with SRI PARC 68 69 Chief executives EditChief executives Name Title Tenure PhotoGeorge C Seager President 1906 1912Gilbert E Mosher President 1912 1938Joseph R Wilson President 1938 1946Joseph C Wilson PresidentCEO 1946 19661961 1967C Peter McColough CEO 1968 1982 David T Kearns CEO 1982 July 31 1990 Paul A Allaire CEO August 1 1990 April 6 1999G Richard Thoman CEO April 7 1999 May 10 2000Paul A Allaire CEO May 11 2000 July 31 2001Anne M Mulcahy CEO August 1 2001 June 30 2009Ursula Burns CEO July 1 2009 December 31 2016 Jeff Jacobson CEO January 1 2017 May 15 2018John Visentin Vice Chairman and CEO May 16 2018 June 28 2022 70 Steve Bandrowczak Vice Chairman and CEO Interim June 29 2022 presentProducts and services Edit Xerox WorkCentre 6605 Xerox manufactures and sells a wide variety of office equipment including scanners printers and multifunction systems that scan print copy email and fax These model families include WorkCentre Phaser and ColorQube 2 For the graphic communications and commercial print industries the Xerox product portfolio includes high volume digital printing presses production printers and wide format printers that use xerographic and inkjet printing technologies Products include the iGen Nuvera DocuPrint and Impika series as well as the Trivor iPrint and Rialto inkjet machines 71 Corporate structure Edit Xerox logo 1968 2008 designed by Chermayeff amp Geismar Although Xerox is a global brand it maintained a joint venture from 1962 to 2021 Fuji Xerox with Japanese photographic firm Fuji Photo Film Co to develop produce and sell in the Asia Pacific region Fujifilm announced in January 2020 that it would not renew its technology agreement with Xerox with Fuji Xerox being renamed to Fujifilm Business Innovation in April 2021 72 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 73 NewField IT is a wholly owned subsidiary of Xerox that implements and supports third party software for MPS providers 74 Xerox now sponsors the Factory Ducati Team in the World Superbike Championship under the name of the Xerox Ducati Rank Xerox EditMain article Rank Xerox Rank Xerox logo used in 1980s The European company 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 and the Rank Xerox Research Centre was renamed to the Xerox Research Centre Europe International Internet company NAVER acquired Xerox Research Centre Europe in June 2017 75 Accounting irregularities EditOn May 31 2001 Xerox Corporation announced that its auditors KPMG LLP had certified Xerox s financial statements for the three years ended December 31 2000 the financials included some restatements 76 On March 31 2002 Xerox restated its financials which reflected the reallocation of equipment sales revenue of more than 2 billion 77 On April 11 2002 the U S Securities and Exchange Commission filed a complaint against Xerox 78 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 which Xerox recorded revenue from copy machine leases recognizing a sale when a lease contract was signed instead of recognizing revenue 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 recognized On December 20 2002 Xerox Corporation reported that it had discovered an error in the calculation of its non cash interest expense related to a debt instrument and associated interest rate swap agreements resulted in after tax understatement of interest expense of approximately 5 million to 6 million or less than 1 cent per share in each of the four quarters of 2001 and for the first three quarters of 2002 79 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 The company received approval to settle the securities lawsuit in 2008 80 On January 29 2003 the SEC filed a complaint against Xerox s auditors 81 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 82 Meanwhile Xerox paid a civil penalty of 10 million 83 As part of the settlement KPMG neither admits nor denies wrongdoings During a 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 were still used by Fuji Xerox until April 2008 Character substitution bug EditIn 2013 German computer scientist David Kriesel de discovered an error in a Xerox WorkCentre 7535 copier The device would substitute number digits in scanned documents even when OCR was turned off For instance a cost table in a scanned document had an entry of 85 40 instead of the original sum of 65 40 84 After unsuccessfully trying to resolve this issue with Xerox s customer support he publicised his findings on his blog Providing example pages that would lead to the bug occurring it was confirmed that this bug was reproducible on a wide variety of Xerox WorkCentre and other high end Xerox copiers The source of the error was a bug in the JBIG2 implementation which is an image compression standard that makes use of pattern matching to encode identical characters only once While this provides a high level of compression it is susceptible to errors in identifying similar characters A possible workaround was published by Kriesel which involved setting the image quality from normal to higher or high Shortly afterwards it was found that the same fix had been suggested in the printer manual which mentioned the occurrence of character substitutions in normal mode indicating that Xerox was aware of the software error 85 In Xerox s initial response to a growing interest by the media the error was described as occurring rarely and only when factory settings had been changed 86 87 After Kriesel provided evidence that the error was also occurring in all three image quality modes normal higher and high including the factory defaults Xerox corrected their statement and released a software patch to eliminate the problem 88 89 Despite the problem being present in some instances also in higher quality mode Xerox advises users that they can use this mode as an alternative to applying the patch 90 Trademark EditThe word xerox is 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 91 92 To this end the company has written to publications that have used Xerox as a verb It has also purchased print advertisements using xerox as a verb claiming that you cannot xerox a document but you can copy it on a Xerox Brand copying machine Xerox Corporation continues to protect its trademark in most if not all trademark categories citation needed Despite their efforts many dictionaries continue to include the use of xerox as a verb including the Oxford English Dictionary In 2012 the Intellectual Property Appellate Board IPAB of India declared xerox a non generic term after almost 50 years 1963 2009 of continued existence on the register without challenge and with proof of almost 44 years of use evident 1965 2009 93 but as of 2015 most Indians still use it as a synonym for photocopying 94 The company has also advertised its trademark concerns in an attempt to persuade journalists and others not to use Xerox as a verb 95 See also EditFaxlore often called Xeroxlore Portals Connecticut New York state CompaniesCitations Edit Xerox Corporation 2022 Annual Report Form 10 K sec gov U S Securities and Exchange Commission February 23 2023 a b Professional Digital Printing Equipment Xerox Xerox Archived from the original on September 4 2015 Retrieved August 28 2015 Xerox Annual Report 2014 Archived from the original on September 6 2015 Retrieved August 26 2015 Online Fact Book Historical Highlights www xerox com 2007 Archived from the original on April 23 2010 Retrieved November 1 2007 Inline XBRL Viewer www sec gov Retrieved April 8 2021 Xerox Corporation Details PCX Archived from the original on May 17 2014 Retrieved May 17 2014 Xerox Fortune Archived from the original on November 28 2018 Retrieved November 27 2018 a b Kilgore Tomi Xerox stock to move to the Nasdaq after 60 years on the NYSE MarketWatch Retrieved September 21 2021 The first computer mouse Archived February 3 2014 at the Wayback Machine New Launches October 2 2007 Retrieved September 21 2012 The Graphical User Interface A Historic Overview Archived July 16 2011 at the Wayback Machine Sensomatic Retrieved September 21 2012 Online Fact Book Xerox at a Glance Archived August 5 2009 at the Wayback Machine xerox com Article retrieved December 13 2006 Carlson Chester Electrophotography pdfpiw uspto gov USPTO Archived from the original on February 20 2017 Retrieved February 19 2017 Institute Bathroom Readers September 1999 Uncle John s Legendary Lost Bathroom Reader Ashland Oregon Bathroom Readers Press p 64 ISBN 1 879682 74 5 Xerox Hopes Its New Logo Doesn t Say Copier Archived February 19 2017 at the Wayback Machine NYT com Article retrieved January 7 2008 Wirten Eva Hemmungs 2004 No Trespassing Authorship Intellectual Property Rights and the Boundaries of Globalization University of Toronto Press p 61 ISBN 9780802086082 Archived from the original on February 4 2017 Retrieved May 18 2016 Xerox 914 Plain Paper Copier Archived September 22 2011 at the Wayback Machine at americanhistory si edu Bird Peter 1994 Chapter 5 Further Automation Improvements LEO The first business computer Biddles Ltd pp 153 159 ISBN 0 9521651 0 4 Jacob E Goldman Founder of Xerox Lab Dies at 90 The New York Times December 21 2011 Archived from the original on July 3 2019 Retrieved November 13 2018 In the late 1960s Xerox then the dominant manufacturer of office copiers Deutsch Claudia H January 8 2008 Xerox Hopes Its New Logo Doesn t Say Copier The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 1 2018 Retrieved October 4 2019 Saito Chung David April 18 2016 Copy His Success Joe Wilson Zeroed In On Innovation At Xerox Investor s Business Daily Archived from the original on August 3 2016 Siklos Richard December 18 2006 C Peter McColough 86 Dies Led Xerox to Prominence in 13 Years as Chief The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 30 2013 Retrieved October 4 2019 WHAM Carlet Cleare January 26 2018 Xerox leaving downtown Rochester relocating hundreds to Webster WHAM Archived from the original on June 17 2018 Retrieved October 4 2019 a b c Gale Directory of Company Histories Xerox Corporation from Amswers com Answers com Archived from the original on October 31 2013 Retrieved November 3 2013 Barmash Isadore July 22 1975 Computer Making Willend Atxerox The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 9 2020 Retrieved October 4 2019 Xerox Appoints Chairman and President New York Times December 14 1971 Smith Gene Xerox Planning to Market Color Copier Next Year New York Times May 19 1972 Smith Gene Xerox Foresees Profit Record in 1973 New York Times May 25 1973 Reckert Claire M Xerox Earnings Set Record New York Times July 17 1974 Reckert Claire M Xerox Earnings Up 5 4 to Record New York Times April 16 1975 Ad Age Encyclopedia of Advertising Xerox corp Advertising Age September 15 2003 Archived from the original on November 7 2013 Retrieved November 2 2013 O Reilly Terry February 5 2017 Judgment Day Super Bowl Advertising CBC Radio Canadian Broadcast Corporation Archived from the original on February 5 2017 Retrieved February 5 2017 Best Neil September 19 2014 Ian Eagle finds the right mix of humor and pop culture in CBS football booth Newsday Newsday Archived from the original on September 20 2017 Retrieved September 20 2017 His father Jack who had been a comedian musician and actor saw his life change following an iconic 1977 Super Bowl ad for Xerox that led to his second career appearing at trade shows store openings and corporate events My father traveled probably about 225 days a year for Xerox dressing up as the monk Brother Dominic Eagle said What started as a commercial became a full time job It was a whole life that started for him after the age of 50 and it turned out to be the most memorable and lucrative part of his career Xerox The Downfall Business Week March 5 2001 Archived from the original on October 27 2015 Retrieved November 23 2015 Strauss Paul R September 1983 Xerox at the Crossroads Data Communications Archived from the original on January 3 2014 Retrieved November 6 2013 Winter Christine November 14 1985 Bell Howell Acquires Two Data Firms Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on September 11 2014 Retrieved September 10 2014 America s Best Leaders Anne Mulcahy Xerox CEO Archived from the original on December 10 2008 Retrieved November 25 2008 Morris Betsy June 2003 The Accidental CEO Fortune Archived from the original on December 17 2018 Retrieved August 3 2020 Deutsch Claudia H September 23 1999 Xerox to Pay 950 Million For Color Printer Business The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 22 2017 Xerox buys Tektronix unit money cnn com September 22 1999 Retrieved August 22 2017 Leaders in One to One in One Personalized VDP and Cross Media Communications XMPie Archived from the original on May 31 2010 Retrieved November 9 2011 Reasons for Selection 2009 Greater Toronto s Top Employers Competition Archived from the original on February 6 2009 Retrieved January 28 2009 Xerox to buy ACS to expand back office services Reuters September 28 2009 Archived from the original on October 1 2009 Retrieved July 3 2017 Xerox acquires NewField IT to expand managed print services May 23 2011 Archived from the original on September 6 2011 3D Systems To Acquire a Portion of Xerox s Oregon Based Solid Ink Engineering and Development Teams Archived from the original on January 16 2014 Retrieved January 14 2014 a b Patnaik Subrat Baker Liana B December 18 2014 Xerox to sell IT outsourcing arm to France s Atos for 1 05 billion Reuters Archived from the original on September 24 2015 Retrieved July 3 2017 de la Merced Michael J Picker Leslie January 29 2016 Xerox in Deal With Carl Icahn to Split Company in Two 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original on December 22 2008 Retrieved July 2 2007 R Sivaraman September 22 2012 Appellate Board upholds trademark status of Xerox The Hindu Archived from the original on November 23 2016 Retrieved December 16 2015 Maggi returns The Indian Express November 11 2015 Archived from the original on November 15 2015 Retrieved November 16 2015 Garber Megan September 25 2014 BUSINESS Kleenex Is a Registered Trademark and Other Desperate Appeals The Atlantic Archived from the original on October 10 2019 Retrieved October 10 2019 To protect their products names the makers of Botox Xerox and Tabasco are advertising directly to the people who write articles about them General references EditEllis Charles D Joe Wilson and the Creation of Xerox Wiley 2006 ISBN 978 0 471 99835 8 Owen David Copies in Seconds How a Lone Inventor and an Unknown Company Created the Biggest Communication Breakthrough Since Gutenberg Chester Carlson and the Birth of the Xerox Machine Simon amp Schuster 2004 ISBN 978 0 7432 5117 4 External links Edit Look up xerox in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Xerox Official website Business data for Xerox BloombergGoogleSEC filingsYahoo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Xerox amp oldid 1154277093, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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