15.01.2008 17:00:00
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Innovation Inside: Patent Powerhouse: Xerox Boasts 101 Inventors with 50 or More Patents
Lalit K. Mestha’s 50th
U.S. utility patent, awarded just days after his 50th
birthday last month, is not only a milestone for him but also a
milestone for Xerox Corporation (NYSE: XRX). Mestha is the 101st
Xerox inventor who has received 50 or more patents, showcasing a culture
of innovation that is both
broad and deep. These inventors have produced a wealth of innovations
that distinguish Xerox products and services
and have helped create the modern office
and the digital
printing industry.
Mestha is among hundreds of Xerox inventors with specialties ranging
from electrical engineering and polymer chemistry to solid state physics
and computer science. Their creativity has resulted in more than 100 new
products and services in the past three years and the broadest portfolio
of digital
document systems and services in the industry.
"Our selection last year as the recipient of
the National
Medal of Technology, the highest technology honor in the United
States, officially recognized what I know: Xerox has some of the world’s
best minds in our research and
technology organizations. Their innovations are creating and
changing industries,” said Sophie
V. Vandebroek, president of the Xerox
Innovation Group and the company’s chief
technology officer. "In every corner of our
company, scientists and engineers are creating the future today, and
conceiving of products and services that are delighting our customers.” Mestha, a
principal scientist in the Xerox Innovation Group, was awarded eight
patents in 2007 and is one of eight Xerox inventors who crossed the
50-patent threshold last year. His rich portfolio of patents, grounded
in the application of modern control theory and centering on sensing and
control of the printing process, was instrumental in developing process
controls in Xerox’s flagship iGen3™
Digital Production Press as well as high-speed spectral sensing and consistent
color innovations in other Xerox products.
His 50th U.S. patent, No. 7,307,720 "Method for corrected spectrophotometer
output for measurements on multiple substrates,”
addresses the question of how to measure color accurately on a variety
of substrates when using small, fast, and inexpensive in-line
spectrophotometers. The technology measures the color in prints to help
deliver consistent color print after print.
An innovation powerhouse for more than 50 years, Xerox has developed
deep expertise in marking, materials, electronics, communications,
software and services. Mestha joins other 50-plus patent holders
representing a variety of disciplines. Among them are:
Douglas
Curry, a principal engineer at the Palo
Alto Research Center (PARC), holds 51 patents. He recently
invented a scanning
microscope that identifies and locates cancer cells in blood. In
the late 80's he co-developed the world's first quad-beam laser
printer and the resulting hyperacuity printing patents form the basis
of today's multibeam laser printers.
Karen Moffat is a polymer chemist who works at the Xerox
Research Centre Canada. Moffat, who is an expert in the area of
toner materials design and synthesis, holds 52 patents, many of which
are related to toner materials including Xerox’s
proprietary Emulsion
Aggregation Toner. EA
Toner is an energy-saving dry ink that produces sharp, vivid
images.
Markus Silvestri is a solid state physicist who also trained in
imaging and color science. Silvestri, who has 52 patents, specializes
in photoreceptors, the material on which the latent image is formed
prior to developing the printed image. His inventions contribute to
the goal of making copiers and printers faster, with fewer print
defects, and longer lasting photoreceptors. He works in Xerox’s
photoreceptor development area in Webster.
Bob
Street, a physicist and senior research fellow at PARC,
has been awarded 53 patents. Street’s
current work focuses on exploring high-volume printing technologies
that could replace techniques traditionally used to create thin-film
transistors, and using organic materials to create large-area
transistor and sensor arrays.
Xerox's investment in innovation generates a steady stream of advanced
technology. More than two-thirds of its equipment revenue is from
products and services launched in the past two years alone, reflecting
the company’s ability to generate a strong
return on its R&D.
Xerox holds more than 8,000 active patents
and invests about 6 percent of its revenue in research, development and
engineering activities.
Xerox Corporation is the world's leading document
management, technology and services enterprise, providing the
industry's broadest portfolio of color
and black-and-white document processing systems and related supplies,
as well as document management consulting
and outsourcing services. For more information, visit http://www.xerox.com/innovation.
Note: For more information on Xerox, visit http://www.xerox.com
or http://www.xerox.com/news.
For open commentary and industry perspectives, visit http://www.xerox.com/blogs
or http://www.xerox.com/podcasts.
Xerox®, the Xerox wordmark and the spherical
connection symbol are trademarks of Xerox Corporation in the United
States and/or other countries.
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