| 1. | High-voltage electrophotography soon became known to the general public as Kirlian photography.
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| 2. | This effect revolutionized electrophotography which is the technological basis of today s office copying machines.
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| 3. | It was the expense and inconvenience of photostats that drove Chester Carlson to study electrophotography.
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| 4. | Through the 1950s, over half the money Battelle spent developing electrophotography came from government contracts.
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| 5. | Over the next five years, the institute conducted experiments to improve the process of electrophotography.
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| 6. | Haloid felt that the word " electrophotography " was too complicated and did not have good recall value.
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| 7. | The Signal Corps thought that electrophotography might be developed into a product that would be immune to such radiation.
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| 8. | In December 1946, Battelle, Carlson, and Haloid signed the first agreement to license electrophotography for a commercial product.
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| 9. | In 1947, Carlson was becoming worried that Battelle was not developing electrophotography quickly enough; his patent would expire in ten years.
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| 10. | Both sides were tentative; Battelle was concerned by Haloid's relatively small size, and Haloid had concerns about electrophotography's viability.
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