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Innovation Square, formerly Xerox Tower, is a skyscraper in downtown Rochester, New York, standing at 443 feet (135 m) tall. [4] The tower is the centerpiece of a roughly 2.7 acres (1.1 ha) complex named Xerox Square. [5] When it was built in 1967, it was the tallest building made of poured-in-place exposed aggregate concrete.
Whitacre Tower - AT&T's corporate headquarters in Dallas Headquarters of AMR Corporation, American Airlines, and American Eagle in Fort Worth Southwest Airlines headquarters in Dallas Comerica Bank Tower. The following are the Fortune 500 companies headquartered in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex: [2] 9 McKesson ; 13 AT&T
Innovation Square: 443 / 135 30 1968 Formerly known as Xerox Tower. Third tallest building in New York outside of New York City: 2 Legacy Tower: 401 / 122 20 1995 Formerly known as Bausch & Lomb Place. Only the spire makes it taller than The Metropolitan 3 The Metropolitan: 392 / 119 27 1973
Xerox PARC Map Viewer was one of the earliest static web mapping sites, developed by Steve Putz in June 1993 at Xerox Corporation's Palo Alto Research Center (PARC). The Xerox PARC Map Viewer was an experiment in providing interactive information retrieval , rather than access to just static files, on the World Wide Web .
PARC entrance. SRI Future Concepts Division (formerly Palo Alto Research Center, PARC and Xerox PARC) is a research and development company in Palo Alto, California. [2] [3] [4] It was founded in 1969 by Jacob E. "Jack" Goldman, chief scientist of Xerox Corporation, as a division of Xerox, tasked with creating computer technology-related products and hardware systems.
The Fort Worth skyline as viewed from the west. Fort Worth, the 5th-most populous city in the U.S. state of Texas, is home to 50 high-rises, 21 of which stand taller than 200 feet (61 m). [1] The tallest building in the city is the 40-story Burnett Plaza, which rises 567 feet (173 m) in Downtown Fort Worth and was completed in 1983. [2]
Xerox management was afraid the product version of Starkweather's invention, which became the 9700, would negatively impact their copier business so the innovation sat in limbo until IBM launched the 3800 laser printer in 1976. The first commercial non-impact printer was the Xerox 1200, introduced in 1973, [77] based on the 3600 copier. It had ...
The company razed the complex and had a 900,000 square feet (84,000 m 2) corporate headquarters campus built after the City of Fort Worth approved a 30-year economic agreement to ensure that the company stayed in Fort Worth. The company sold the building and, as of 2009, had two years left of a rent-free lease in the building.