In October 1948, Haloid announced the existence of a photocopying process that would later become known colloquially as Xeroxing after Haloid changed its name to Xerox.
32.
In October 1948, Haloid announced the existence of a photocopying process that would later become known colloquially as Xeroxing after Haloid changed its name to Xerox.
33.
He sold his rights in 1947 to the Haloid Company, a wet-chemical photocopy machine manufacturer, founded in 1906 in Rochester, New York.
34.
During this period, Battelle conducted most of the basic research into electrophotography, while Haloid concentrated on trying to make a commercial product out of the results.
35.
Haloid renamed the process xerography ( from Greek for dry writing ) and eventually renamed itself after the technology, becoming Haloid Xerox and later, the Xerox Corp.
36.
Haloid renamed the process xerography ( from Greek for dry writing ) and eventually renamed itself after the technology, becoming Haloid Xerox and later, the Xerox Corp.
37.
Xerox was founded in Rochester in 1906 as The Haloid Company, and retains a significant presence in Rochester, although its headquarters are now in Norwalk, Connecticut.
38.
That iteration of this article appears to have been some sort of fan-cruft . I discovered this will trying to create a redirect for Haloid to Xerox.
39.
In the mid-1940s Carlson sold the rights to his inventionwhich became known as " xerography " to the Haloid Company and photostatting soon sank into history.
40.
Kodak's Verifax, for instance, could sit on one side of a desk and sold for $ 100; Haloid's competing machines were more expensive and substantially larger.