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It was the world's largest independent provider of document management systems, copiers and services until it was purchased by manufacturer Ricoh in 2008. [2] IKON uses copiers, printers and multifunction printer technologies from leading manufacturers and document management software and systems from companies like Captaris, Kofax, and EFI.
The Ricoh Company, Ltd. (/ ˈ r iː k oʊ /) (株式会社リコー, Kabushiki-gaisha Rikō) is a Japanese multinational imaging and electronics company.It was founded by the now-defunct commercial division of the Institute of Physical and Chemical Research (Riken) known as the Riken Concern, on 6 February 1936 as Riken Sensitized Paper (理研感光紙, Riken Kankōshi).
Katana is the name given to a Ricoh photocopier. It is a high volume machine that is able to copy at speeds of up to 135 pages per minute, while the slowest Katana copier can copy at 90 copies per minute. It is a black and white machine but has a color scanner fitted to it. [1] It can be used as both a photocopier and printer at the same time.
thermal bar code label printers (desktop and portable) Dataproducts: acquired by Hitachi Kochi Datasouth merged to AMT Datasouth Decision Data: defunct Delphax Technologies inc Diablo acquired by Xerox Digital Equipment Corporation: printer business acquired by GENICOM Dell: DTGPRO DTF Printers, DTG Printers, DTF Ink
Headquartered in Seoul, South Korea, Sindoh's main market for 2D printers is Korea, the United States, and Europe for its 3D printers. [1] The company was founded in 1960 under the title of Sindoh Trading Co., Ltd. The name was changed to Sindoh Co., Ltd. in 1969 after the company entered into a partnership with Japanese corporation Ricoh.
An A4-size Gestetner offset-printing machine. The Gestetner is a type of duplicating machine named after its inventor, David Gestetner (1854–1939). During the 20th century, the term Gestetner was used as a verb—as in Gestetnering. [1] The Gestetner company established its base in London, filing its first patent in 1879.
During the 1980s, a convergence began in some high-end machines towards what came to be called a multi-function printer: a device that combined the roles of a photocopier, a fax machine, a scanner, and a computer network-connected printer. Low-end machines that can copy and print in color have increasingly dominated the home-office market as ...
In the early 1990s Savin Phased out liquid copiers and entered the low cost powder copier business. Most of Savin copier business was machines that made under 50 copies per minute, where it held dominant low price points. In 1995, Ricoh Company acquired Savin Corporation, and Savin was made a wholly-owned sales subsidiary. [2]