One of the greatest inventors in history, Thomas Edison (1847-1931) is most remembered for his invention of the electric light and designing one of the original electric power stations, which brought electricity to millions. He also invented the original copy machine. Later known as a mimeograph machine (patented by Edison in 1887), it was a stencil devise that forced ink through the holes in the stencils to duplicate or copy the original document. One disadvantage of the mimeograph was that the original had to be specially created as a mimeograph stencil or master.
The machine more commonly called a copier in the early 21st century is a xerographic copier. The process was invented by Chester Carlson. It was brought to market by Carlson, working with a tam from the Battelle Institute and a team from The Haloid Company. Haloid later changed its name to Xerox Corporation.
Chester A. Carlson invented the xerographic process in New York City in 1938. The Xerox machine, the photocopying machine introduced in 1958, was developed by Mr Carlson along with a large team of engineers at Battelle Labs in Columbus, Ohio, and Haloid Corporation (later Xerox Corporation) in Rochester, NY.
The xerographic copying process used in plain paper copiers was invented by Chester Carlson in 1938. The first commercial machines using this process were brought to market by the Haloid-Xerox Company, later named Xerox Corporation, in the late 1950s.
The process that we now call xerography, or photocopying, was invented by Chester F. Carlson. His first successful demonstration of the process, which he named electrophotography, occurred on 22 October 1938. Carlson eventually patented the process, but it was the 1950s before a commercially successful application of the process came to market through the Haloid Corporation, later known as the Xerox Corporation.
Xeroxgraphy, the photocopy process that was commercially introduced by Xerox/Haliod in the late 1950s was invented by Chester Carlson in 1938.
Xerography, the most widely used form of photocopying, was invented by Chester Carlson, who made the first successful copy in Astoria, Queens, New York City on 22 October 1938.
A "Xerox copy" is a photocopy that has been created using a copy machine that was marketed by the Xerox Corporation.
The phrase "you are about to delivered of a baby xerox machine" is someone's cute way of announcing that a photocopy machine will be delivered soon.
All photocopy machines use electrical energy.
Chester Carlson invented the xerographic process that is used in most photocopy machines today.
The word "xerox" is a proper noun and a trademark. Xerox is short for the company name, Xerox Corporation, and can also used to refer to a machine made by Xerox Corporation or the product of such a machine. It is incorrect to use Xerox as a verb or as a generic term. The proper generic terms are "copy" and "photocopy."
A Xerox machine is any product sold by the Xerox Corporation and bearing its brand. There are many different products, working on many different principles. The working principal of a photocopy machine or laser printer is the photoelectric effect.
brazil invented the first photocopier machine
Photocopy machines, whether made by Xerox or other companies, do not cause infertility.
A Xerox Machine is any machine marketed by the Xerox Corporation. Many different machines have been marketed by Xerox Corporation, and were invented by different people at different times. Some people incorrectly say "xerox machine" when they want to say "photocopier" or something similar. The process used in most modern photocopiers is called xerography and was invented by Chester Carlson. Machines using that process were developed (not invented) by a team of engineers working for the Haloid Company, later called the Xerox Corporation.
A printer marketed by the Xerox Corporation is an output device if it is connected to a computer.
Xerox is the company's name. The word Xerox is sometimes misused instead of the word photocopy. If you want to know Hindi word for photocopy then it's "pratilipi".
he invented the Xerox machine