Chester Carlson invented the xerographic process that is used in most photocopy machines today.
Chester Carlson invented xerography, the process eventually used in the original Xerox machines. He first successfully demonstrated the process in 1938
The term "Xerox copy" is often incorrectly used to mean the same thing as "photocopy." But "Xerox" is a proper noun and a trademark for the Xerox Corporation so "Xerox copy" actually means a copy made on a copier that carries the Xerox brand. The word "photocopy" means any copy that has been made using a photographic process and includes copies made on Xerox machines, and other copiers.
Yes, "Xerox" is a proper noun. It is the short form of the company name, Xerox Corporation, and is part of the company's trade mark.
If by "Xerox machine" you mean a copier or printer marketed by the Xerox Corporation, the only rays emitted are rays of light emitted by parts of some copiers.
Xerox machines do not convert light energy into sound.
Chester Carlson invented xerography, the process eventually used in the original Xerox machines. He first successfully demonstrated the process in 1938
Chester Carlson invented the xerographic process and worked with the Battelle Institute and Haloid Corporation (later renamed the Xerox Corporation) to apply that process to a marketable product.
Xerox is the name of a large company that was founded, not invented. The xerographic process used in many copiers and printers that are made by several different companies was invented in 1938 by Chester A. Carlson.
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.
The word Xerox is not an acronym. It is derived from the invented word "xerography" which describes the process of plain paper copying invented in 1938 by Chester Carlson and means "dry writing."
The process called xerography was invented in New York City and was brought to market as the Xerox Copier by the Xerox Corporation, a US corporation based initially in Rochester, NY, and later in Connecticut.
Hi guys I worked for Rank Xerox from 1970 till 2001. I can't directly answer the question, but I can tell you that in the late 1970s we were using a fax machine (I think the 485) which was the first machine I recall.
Xerox is a company (that invented the xerox copier). Companies are not living creatures and therefore they do not have relatives.
The trademark, Xerox is derived from the word 'xerography", which describes the process used in the original Xerox plain paper copiers. Xerography is an invented term and comes from the root words "xero," Greek for "dry," and "graphos," Greek for "writing."
It was invented in 1973
The relationship between Xerox PARC and Ethernet is that the Ethernet was invented at Xerox PARC.
Floyd Carlson was not connected with the invention of the Xerox copier. Chester Carlson developed the process that is now called xerography and that is the basis for the first copiers made by Xerox. The engineers and technicians of the Haloid Company, working with Carlson and scientists of the Battelle Memorial Institute, invented the first "Xerox machine." Haloid later changed its name to Xerox Corporation.