The Printerverse will offer a mixture of events focused on the latest industry trends featuring panel discussions, interactive sharing sessions, awards presentations and networking events. It's designed to create an “Out of this World” show floor experience for show-goers and will also serve as a social media hub on the PRINT 13 and CPP EXPO show floor.
Xerox Corp.
In this webinar, users explore easy-to-use end-to-end tools that can be combined with digital press solutions to optimize productivity.
Xerox Corp. is seeking tax breaks from Monroe County in New York for a possible $35 million expansion to one of its Webster, NY toner plants, a move that could add 25 jobs. In its COMIDA application, Xerox says it is looking at Building 216 at its Webster campus, as well as some locations overseas—as the site of a planned expansion to boost Xerox’s toner production capacity.
Xerox spokesman Bill McKee said the company is simply investigating whether COMIDA would consider tax breaks on the additions. The Webster expansion would involve two additions to 216 totaling 55,000 square feet, as well
Frederic Printing, a Consolidated Graphics (CGX) company based in Aurora, CO, does its job when it comes to having the right people in place. The firm is always aggressively seeking out new talent. Chris Greene, Frederic president, notes that Denver is not exactly a printing mecca, so he usually has a fairly strong sense of who's out there and who might complement the existing Frederic staff.
The presses are good. The substrates are good. The software is good. And, as Cathy Cartolano, VP of sales and technical services at Mitsubishi Imaging (MPM), says, image quality is "scary close" to offset. So why doesn't continuous-feed inkjet dominate the market?
In her column this month, Margie Dana shares seven human behavior triggers that were presented by Nancy Harhut, chief creative officer for the Wilde Agency in Westwood, MA, at a direct marketing conference hosted by NEDMA (the New England Direct Marketing Association) in May.
Xerox has introduced the new Wide Format IJP 2000 printer for the faster production of large indoor posters, signs, point-of-purchase graphics and banners. It can print high-quality, color signs in five seconds, 30-foot banners in one minute, and production runs of 200 prints in about 20 minutes.
Despite the heavy rainfall that plummeted down in New York City yesterday, 430 printing and publishing industry leaders still made their way to the 2013 Prism Award Luncheon at the elegant Gotham Hall. Guy Gecht, CEO of EFI, presented the Prism Award for distinguished leadership to Xerox Chairman and CEO Ursula Burns.
NEW YORK—Heavy rainfall didn’t dampen the spirits of the 430 printing and publishing industry leaders who attended the 2013 Prism Award Luncheon at the elegant Gotham Hall here on June 13. More than $5 million has been raised during the past 27 years of the annual event to fund student scholarships for New York University’s Master of Arts in Graphic Communications Management and Technology degree program. There are now 650 graduates of the program.
It's still very early days, but researchers at the Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) have been taking significant strides in developing a new technology that makes it possible to print electronic components like sensors, transistors, light-emitters, smart tags, flexible batteries, memory, smart labels, and more.
Although PARC's work doesn't involve 3D printing, it does share one major trait with that very hot technology: it is additive rather than subtractive.
Though PARC is a division of Xerox, and that company's decades of printing expertise, it is not developing the new technology for its parent. Rather, it is working in conjunction with private companies