Milestone-Proposal talk:Development of the Laser Printer: Difference between revisions

From IEEE Milestones Wiki
(→‎Comments -- ~~~~: new section)
 
Line 5: Line 5:
David Bart
David Bart
Milestone Advocate
Milestone Advocate
== Expert response -- [[User:Jbart64|Jbart64]] ([[User talk:Jbart64|talk]]) 14:01, 1 September 2020 (UTC) ==
On Aug 31, 2020, at 6:23 PM, John Shoch <j@shoch.com> wrote:
My name is John Shoch.
I joined the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) in 1971;  it was in my first year there that I saw an early demonstration of the Xerox laser printing engine, the Scanning Laser Output Terminal (SLOT).
Over the years that SLOT was combined with the Ethernet local network, the Alto computer, and the Research Character Generator (RCG) [and lots of software]  to produce EARS -- the first laser print server.  For several years this laser print server produced millions of prints as the only networked print server for Xerox PARC.
I ended my career at Xerox as President of the Office Systems Division;  one of our products was an early commercial laser printer server.
My later career as a venture capitalist kept me in touch with many of the principals, and subsequent market developments.
I have reviewed, and support, the proposed IEEE milestone, "Development of the Laser Printer, 1971-1977."
John Shoch
Xerox, 1971-1985
Life Member, IEEE
Trustee, Computer History Museum

Revision as of 14:01, 1 September 2020

Comments -- Jbart64 (talk) 16:35, 31 August 2020 (UTC)

To all- I have worked closely with the proposer and the team who compiled this Milestone proposal. I fully support the final proposal as shown, which contains the team's consolidated edits and combined thoughts. The proposer is one of the experts, and a second expert has been contacted. Statements from both will be posted when received. David Bart Milestone Advocate

Expert response -- Jbart64 (talk) 14:01, 1 September 2020 (UTC)

On Aug 31, 2020, at 6:23 PM, John Shoch <j@shoch.com> wrote:

My name is John Shoch. I joined the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) in 1971; it was in my first year there that I saw an early demonstration of the Xerox laser printing engine, the Scanning Laser Output Terminal (SLOT). Over the years that SLOT was combined with the Ethernet local network, the Alto computer, and the Research Character Generator (RCG) [and lots of software] to produce EARS -- the first laser print server. For several years this laser print server produced millions of prints as the only networked print server for Xerox PARC.

I ended my career at Xerox as President of the Office Systems Division; one of our products was an early commercial laser printer server.

My later career as a venture capitalist kept me in touch with many of the principals, and subsequent market developments.

I have reviewed, and support, the proposed IEEE milestone, "Development of the Laser Printer, 1971-1977."

John Shoch Xerox, 1971-1985 Life Member, IEEE Trustee, Computer History Museum