Big name in scanners

Now we are looking on the crossword clue for: Big name in scanners.
it’s A 20 letters crossword puzzle definition.
Next time, try using the search term “Big name in scanners crossword” or “Big name in scanners crossword clue” when searching for help with your puzzle on the web. See the possible answers for Big name in scanners below.

Did you find what you needed?
We hope you did!. If you are still unsure with some definitions, don’t hesitate to search them here with our crossword puzzle solver.

Possible Answers:

EPSON.

Last seen on: Wall Street Journal Crossword – December 23 2021 – Surround Sound

Random information on the term “EPSON”:

Inkjet technology originally was invented for depositing aqueous inks on paper in ‘selective’ positions based on the ink properties only. Inkjet nozzles and inks were designed together and the inkjet performance was based on a design. It was used as a data recorder in the early 1950s, later in the 1950s co-solvent-based inks in the publishing industry were seen for text and images, then solvent-based inks appeared in industrial marking on specialized surfaces and in the1990’s phase change or hot-melt ink has become a popular with images and digital fabrication of electronic and mechanical devices, especially jewelry. Although the terms “jetting”, “inkjet technology” and “inkjet printing”, are commonly used interchangeably, inkjet printing usually refers to the publishing industry, used for printing graphical content, while industrial jetting usually refers to general purpose fabrication via material particle deposition.

Many companies have worked with inkjet over the years. Many, many patents have been issued and the technology has been used in a number of products. The basic form of the inkjet was a single nozzle with either fluid forced through under pressure, pulled from it by electrical potential or pushed out with the help of a piezo. Single nozzle inkjets will be discussed first in this introduction. Inkjet technology was pioneered by Teletype Corporation in the 1960s which introduced the “electronic pull”, high voltage drop extraction from a nozzle, Inktronic Teleprinter in 1965 printing at 120 characters per second (cps) from a row of 40 inkjets using the Charles R. Winston patent, Method and Apparatus for Transferring Inks, 1962, US3,060,429. Teletype experimented with “hot-melt” wax inks as described in a Teletype patent by Johannes F. Gottwald, Liquid Metal Recorder, 1971, US 3,596,285, that outputs a metal fabrication of a formed (Stock exchange symbols and quotes) symbol able to be removed from the conveyor carrier and the Bismuth metal alloy reused if desired. The use of Hot-melt inks with a newer Drop-On-Demand inkjet technology(invented by Zoltan in 1972) with these inks would not be seen again until 1984 at Howtek and Exxon.

EPSON on Wikipedia