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PARC’s Sensor Tape innovation: all printed disposable blast dosimeter
©2008 Palo Alto Research Center, Inc. All Rights Reserved

DARPA program builds on PARC foundation in printing large-area, flexible electronics

Palo Alto Research Center Incorporated (PARC), a Xerox Corporation company, has been selected by the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) to develop and prototype, all-printed, disposable, blast dosimeters. This technology is a flexible, wearable, electronic “tape” that contains sensors to record data associated with exposure to explosive blasts in the battlefield. The $2 million, 18-month DARPA program will leverage PARC’s jet-printing expertise to develop low-cost technologies and processes for fabricating the tape’s sensors, memory, and control electronics.

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Fortune Magazine
Xerox's inventor-in-chief An innovation revival has lifted profits to $1.2 billion. Fortune's Geoff Colvin asks CTO Sophie Vandebroek: Can the company keep it up?

Clarkson University
Xerox Scientist and Inventor Receives Clarkson University Honorary Degree

PC World
Xerox technology responds to 'colorful' language

TechWorld.com
Xerox scientist can't stop inventing things

ITWorldCanada.com
Nanotechnology funding could push frontiers of technology


The Xerox Innovation Group conducts work in color science, computing, digital imaging, work practices, electromechanical systems, novel materials, linguistics, work practice analysis, and nanotechnology connected to Xerox's expertise in printing and document management.Ê The company consistently builds its inventions into business by embedding them in Xerox products and solutions, using them as the foundation for new business, or licensing or selling them to other entities.
 
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