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The history of photo copy

 
History of photocopying - In 1949, Xerox introduced the first xerographic copier: The Model A. The old Xerox machine was so successful that photocopying became known as "Xeroxing" photostat "is an old term for photocopying, but some in the United Kingdom continue to use the word" Photostat. "Some languages use the terms hybrids, such as the widely used Polish term kserokopia (Xerocopy. ")

Be xerographic copiers, copies of the photo directly produced by machines such as Kodak Verifax were used. An impression Verifax required supplies costing $ 0.15 USD in 1969, when a Xerox print could be made for USD $ 0.03 including paper and labor. Those where the days when the minimum wage for a worker in the United States reached $ 1.65 per hour.

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http:www.copy-machine-outlet.info

Xerographic copier manufacturers took advantage of the situation is deemed high, the value of the 1960s and early 1970s and marketed paper that was "specifically designed" for xerographic output. At the end of 1970 paper producers have run xerographic capacity, "a requirement for most of their brands of office paper.

Advances for color photocopies and the area of art Xerox developed in the 1970s and 1980s. Some devices sold as photocopiers have replaced the process of drum-based inkjet or transfer film technology. Poles

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Many great technological advances have been made since the first Copernican model of a Xerox 1949. These old Model A in 1949 would be the perfect addition to any collection of antiques. Anthony Benjamin http:www.mysecretsites.info

Anthony Benjamin is an avid world traveler, lover of nature and animals. He likes to write and share their wealth of information and adventures in his writings. His favorite place to retreat and write is his summer home, alone atop a mountain in the Great Smoky Mountains. A visit to its website is a real treat: http:www.appalachian-treasures.com


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