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SPOTLIGHTS:

clients & industry contributions

Due to the confidentiality of our client relationships and work, below is a partial, public list of "the company we keep". This list includes current medium- and large-enterprise clients; recent startups and companies incubated on site; past spinoffs, spinouts, licensees, and other ventures with PARC contributions.

 

future networking technology

Samsung
future networking technology

Building on their relationship from other joint hardware and software projects over the past 5 years, Samsung & PARC recently entered into a new engagement targeted at advancing the state of the art in future communications and networking technologies. PARC is one of the partners of Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology, focused on helping the company achieve its mission of leading the digital convergence movement.

blog post: CCN now supports Android

 

 

ethnography services beyond marketing insight

Dentsu
ethnography services beyond marketing insight

The Dentsu Group holds the largest share of the Japanese advertising market and is ranked in the top 5 agency companies by Advertising Age. Dentsu Marketing Insight advances corporations’ research processes and solutions with marketing research conducted for more than 5,000 projects annually. Going beyond typical market research and findings, PARC’s ethnography services for Dentsu and Dentsu Marketing Insight will deliver extensive understanding of human behavior, in-depth insights, and comprehensive outlooks on people’s lives/contexts. As a result, the new partnership with PARC will enable Dentsu clients to discover untapped needs, create new business value, and produce more differentiated and game-changing products or services.

news release: PARC Collaborates With Dentsu and Dentsu Marketing Insight...

 

 

networking cloud operating system

PowerCloud Systems
networking cloud operating system

Leveraging PARC intellectual property and expertise on usable security and networking virtualization, PowerCloud Systems has developed CloudCommand™ -- the first NetCOS (Networking Cloud Operating System), an online software platform capable of configuring, securing, and managing networking devices from anywhere. CloudCommand™ provides major OEM vendors with a platform to bring enterprise-grade networking solutions to small businesses with the simplicity, security, performance, and affordability they need. PowerCloud Systems is a PARC spin out, with funding closed in May 2010.

 

 

information in context

Meshin
information in context

A Xerox-funded company incubated inside PARC, Meshin found its original roots inside PARC research focused on engineering semantic software applications to increase the productivity of today's information workers. Using natural language processing, context-aware computing, and image recognition technologies, a team of seasoned business professionals -- supported by PARC scientists -- have created a "context-aware information services" platform to harvest a semantic "mesh" of information relationships that contextually connects disparate information across a user's information systems.

 

 

data center power

Power Assure
data center power

Power Assure, Inc, a developer of power management solutions for data centers and PARC are working together to make a transformative change in the management of servers in data centers, with the ultimate goal of significantly reducing overall power consumption. The companies were awarded a $5 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy for joint product development and Power Assure’s commercialization of the resulting integrated energy-efficiency solutions for large data centers.

case study: Collaborating to reduce each other's risk and complement expertise

 

 

interconnects for high-speed servers

Sun Microsystems / acquired by Oracle
interconnects for high-speed servers

To maintain a competitive advantage in their high-speed, high-end server market, Sun engaged PARC in co-development and ongoing collaboration, including PARC's ClawConnect technology for interconnects.

white paper: New Innovation Models Spur Collaboration and Growth (by Frost & Sullivan)

 

 

UV-LEDs

Dowa
UV-LEDs

Dowa Electronics Materials Co., Ltd. acquired patents and capabilities to manufacture and develop a new category of UV-LED based products.

case study: Entering an emerging product market through IP and new technology capability transfer

 

 

human interfaces

NEC
human interfaces

NEC and PARC (along with Carnegie Mellon University) collaborated to support easy-to-use human interfaces for NEC design/evaluation processes, tools, and products.

case study: Going beyond usability and incremental innovation to target new markets

 

 

conversation analysis study

Motorola
conversation analysis study

PARC helped Motorola, Inc. with an ethnography-style study to investigate sharing practices among family and friends.

case study: Using conversational insights to guide new products

 

 

natural language search

Powerset / acquired by Microsoft
natural language search

Powerset, Inc. and PARC signed an exclusive deal in 2007 to develop and commercialize breakthrough search engine technology in consumer search, leveraging more than three decades of PARC’s research and technology refinement in natural language understanding.  Microsoft acquired Powerset in 2008.

case study: Pioneering and deploying a breakthrough consumer search engine

 

 

low-cost solar CPV design

SolFocus
low-cost solar CPV design

In 2006, PARC announced a partnership with SolFocus, Inc. to develop low-cost, reliable solar energy systems employing PARC’s concentrator photovoltaic (CPV) technology. SolFocus was incubated at PARC where it expanded its operations and funding before moving to new headquarters in 2007.

case study: Incubating solar cleantech venture on site accelerates its time to market

 

 

rich media technology & more

Dai Nippon Printing
rich media technology & more

Dai Nippon Printing Co. Ltd. worked with PARC to develop and deploy a context- and activity-aware system that recommends information about local area activities by matching the consumer’s location, time of day, personal tastes, and more.

case study: Creating a new media business opportunity and technology platform

 

 

ubiquitous computing

Fujitsu
ubiquitous computing

Fujitsu Limited and PARC engaged in a multi-year joint research and co-development agreement for ubiquitous computing... as well as for other technology expertise and services.

reprint: Pioneering Ubiquitous Information Services (Fujitsu Journal)

 

 

embedding digital data

Microglyph
embedding digital data

Microglyph Technology GmbH, a provider of customized auto-ID solutions headquartered in Germany, licensed basic PARC DataGlyphs® patents to form the foundation of their proprietary Microglyph® code. PARC DataGlyphs® are an unobtrusive method of embedding computer-readable data on a variety of surfaces. Unlike most barcodes, PARC DataGlyphs® are flexible in shape and size making them suitable for curved surfaces.

 

 

displays & sensing for digital medical imaging

dpiX
displays & sensing for digital medical imaging

Xerox PARC spinoff dpiX, the world's leading source for high-resolution amorphous silicon (a-Si) sensor arrays, was acquired by Trixell (a Siemens Medical/ Phillips Medical/ Thomson-CSF joint venture), Planar Systems, and Varian Medical in 1999. dpiX a-Si technology provides the foundation for medical, industrial, military, and security X-ray imaging.

 

 

electronic reusable paper (e-paper)

Gyricon
electronic reusable paper (e-paper)

Gyricon Media, Inc. was spun out in 2000 to commercialize PARC’s “electronic reusable paper,” a document display technology that is thin, flexible and portable like paper but can be connected to a network and reused thousands of times. Gyricon LLC. closed in 2005 though Xerox continues to license the e-paper display technology.

 

 

digital rights management (DRM)

ContentGuard / acquired by Microsoft, Time Warner, Thomson/ acquired by Pendrell Corp.
digital rights management (DRM)

ContentGuard was spun-out in 2000 to develop and license software for digital rights management. Its eXtensible rights Markup Language (XrML) digital rights-management software, developed at PARC, authorizes access to content or a network service in a language that multiple systems can read. In 2005, Microsoft, Time Warner and Thomson acquired ContentGuard. In 2011, Pendrell Technologies announced they would work with Time Warner to accelerate ContentGuard -- "a leading inventor, developer and licensor of DRM and related content distribution patents and technologies" -- to provide flexible DRM solutions for the growing digital content distribution market.

 

 

book scanning technology

Kirtas
book scanning technology

Kirtas Technologies, Inc. holds an exclusive license for page-turning technology developed by PARC and the Xerox Wilson Center for Research & Technology. Kirtas, a pioneer in high-quality digitization, is known for its patented automatic book scanners, software, and services which reduce the cost and overhead of mass digitization.

 

 

personalized search technology

GroupFire / Outride / acquired by Google
personalized search technology

GroupFire, Inc. was spun off from PARC in 2000 to commercialize almost 70 PARC intellectual property claims covering information retrieval, personalization, contextualization, data mining, natural language semantic analysis, and artificial intelligence. GroupFire enabled personalized and simplified Internet searches by managing bookmarks and allowing access to them from any computer connected to the Internet. GroupFire later became Outride, Inc., whose intellectual property and technology was acquired by Google in 2001.

 

 

portable document reader

Uppercase / acquired by Microsoft
portable document reader

In 1998, Uppercase, Inc. was spun out to commercialize a result of PARC’s ubiquitous computer research: a thin, lightweight, pen-based, page-oriented, network-accessible portable document-reading device (PDR) for the mobile professional. The technology was acquired by Microsoft 2000.

 

 

information visualization & knowledge extraction

Inxight Software / acquired by Business Objects / acquired by SAP
information visualization & knowledge extraction

Inxight Software, Inc. was spun out by PARC in 1996 to provide information visualization and knowledge extraction software. The software commercialized PARC’s unique approach to information visualization by using a hyperbolic browser and other focus-plus-context visualization techniques to give the user 3-D views of text databases. Business Objects acquired Inxight in 2007. Business Objects was acquired by SAP in 2008.

 

 

web-based meeting & presentation solution

Placeware / acquired by Microsoft
web-based meeting & presentation solution

PARC’s research on how a sense of place can create more meaningful interaction on the Internet resulted in a 1996 spin-out company called Placeware. The company provided users with a live, Web-based presentation solution for field and customer communication, and became the largest Internet meeting solutions provider. Placeware was acquired by Microsoft in 2003 to become Microsoft Office LiveMeeting.

 

 

CTI
customer insight

Customers & Technologies, Inc. (CTI), a consulting business, was founded in 1994 by former PARC researcher Henry Sang’s studies of how customers implemented technologies developed at PARC. CTI developed methodologies to integrate new technologies into document processes.

 

 

electronic whiteboard technology & collaborative meeting tools

LiveWorks
electronic whiteboard technology & collaborative meeting tools

PARC’s research on computational support for real-time, multi-media collaboration in face-to-face and remote meetings resulted in the creation of the LiveBoard, a blackboard-sized touch-sensitive screen capable of displaying an image of approximately a million pixels, which utilized a keyboard and electronic pen for collaborative annotation and drawing.  LiveWorks was spun out in 1992 to market LiveBoards.

 

 

Semaphore Communications
network encryption

Semaphore Communications was spun out in 1990 to bring advanced encryption systems for networks technology to the marketplace. A distinguishing feature of this technology was that it performed encryption in the hardware, which made it faster than most software-based products.

 

 

document management processes

Documentum / acquired by EMC
document management processes

In 1990, Documentum was spun out to commercialize document management solutions. Documentum software enabled a change made in one place in a document to be automatically replaced in all appropriate places in a document. Documentum was acquired by EMC in 2003.

 

 

AWPI
print controller system

Advanced Workstations Products, Inc. (AWPI) was spun out in 1989 to productize a high-performance, low-cost, non-proprietary print controller system for Xerox high-end printers to operate on a network. Xerox bought back the company in 1991.

 

 

object-oriented programming

ParcPlace Systems / ObjectShare / acquired by Cincom Systems
object-oriented programming

The Smalltalk-80 object-oriented programming language was commercialized through the formation of ParcPlace Systems in 1988. Smalltalk was the first object-oriented programming language with an integrated user interface, overlapping windows, integration documents, and cut & paste editor. ParcPlace became ObjectShare in 1997, and its VisualWorks business unit was acquired by Cincom Systems in 1999.

 

 

StepperVision / acquired by Optical Associates
wafer processing

StepperVision was spun off in 1987 to market a monitoring device that specified optimal settings for semiconductor equipment called “wafer steppers.” The technology was developed by PARC to speed up the alignment of silicon wafers during lithography in the wafer line it used for making experimental integrated circuit designs. Optical Associates, Inc. acquired StepperVision in 1988.

 

 

Ethernet fiber optics

Synoptics / Bay Networks / acquired by Nortel
Ethernet fiber optics

PARC developed an Ethernet system that could operate on an optical cabling system. This resulted in the 1985 spin out of Synoptics Communications, Inc., who pioneered the use of Ethernet networking technology over phone wire commonly found in most buildings. It became Bay Networks in 1994, and was acquired by Nortel in 1998.

 

 

Microlytics / acquired by SelecTronics
spell-checking software

Microlytics, Inc. was spun out in 1985 to commercialize linguistics-based technology resulting from PARC’s research and understanding of the deep structure and mathematical properties of language and artificial intelligence. This linguistic compression technology was used for visual recall, intelligent retrieval and data compression technologies for spell-checking software. Microlytics was acquired by SelecTronics, Inc. in 1990.

 

 

page description language

Adobe
page description language

PARC engineer John Warnock created the Interpress Page Description Language, a proprietary computer language to control Xerox laser printers. Warnock and PARC Imaging Sciences Laboratory manager Charles Geschke founded Adobe Systems, Inc. in 1983 to develop PostScript, a next-generation Page Description language that became the standard in desktop publishing.

 

 

solid-state lasers

Spectra Diode Labs / merged with JDS Uniphase
solid-state lasers

Based on PARC’s distributed feedback (solid state) laser using gallium arsenide (GaAs), Spectra Diode Labs, Inc. (SDLI), a joint venture between Xerox and Spectra-Physics, was formed in 1983 to develop high-power state-of-the-art solid-state semiconductor laser diodes. SDLI and JDS Uniphase merged in 2001.

 

 

disk storage

Komag / acquired by Western Digital
disk storage

In 1983, former PARC researcher Tu Chen founded Komag, Inc., which became the leading supplier of thin-film disks, the primary high-capacity storage medium for digital data for consumers of computers, enterprise storage systems and electronic appliances such as digital video recorders, game boxes and consumer electronic storage systems. Komag was acquired by Western Digital in 2007.

 

 

database manipulation

Metaphor / acquired by IBM
database manipulation

Metaphor Computer Systems, Inc. was founded by former PARC researcher David Liddle in 1982 to develop systems that enabled nontechnical professionals to access and manipulate data in large computer data bases on high-powered workstations. While at PARC, Liddle worked on the Ethernet local area network for personal computers and the graphical user interface. Metaphor was acquired by IBM in 1991.

 

 

Optimem / acquired by Cipher Data Products / acquired by Archive Corporation
non-erasable magneto-optical storage

Optimem was spun out in 1980 to commercialize non-erasable magneto-optical storage device technologies developed at PARC to enable high-speed access of information for the Xerox Alto personal workstation. Optimem was acquired by Cipher Data Products, Inc. in 1986, which was acquired by Archive Corporation in 1990.

 

 

Aurora Systems
computer paint (graphics) system

In 1973, PARC researcher Dick Shoup invented SuperPaint, a pioneering graphics program and pixel-based frame buffer system. In 1979, Shoup left PARC to co-found graphics company Aurora Systems to develop and market further generations of painting and animation systems and to supply computer graphic services for the video broadcast and production markets.  Shoup won an Emmy award in 1983 for his work done at PARC in the 1970s and an Academy Award for Scientific and Technical Achievement in 1998.

 

 

portable computer

GRiD Systems / acquired by Tandy (Radio Shack)
portable computer

John Ellenby led the Xerox Alto II personal workstation development team at PARC prior to leaving in 1979 to found GRiD Systems Corporation. GRiD developed the Compass, a “clamshell case” portable high-end computer for executives and other specialized application laptops before being acquired by Tandy Corporation (Radio Shack) in 1988.

 

 

VLSI ASIC technology

VLSI Technologies / acquired by Philips Electronics / NXP Semiconductors
VLSI ASIC technology

In 1979, former PARC researcher Doug Fairbairn co-founded VLSI Technologies, Inc. The methodologies used were developed at PARC by Fairbairn and Lynn Conway with California Institute of Technology researcher Carver Mead. VLSI Technologies, Inc. became the pioneer of application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) technology. In 1999, it was acquired by Philips Electronics and is part of Philips spin-off NXP Semiconductors.

 

 

 

 

networking equipment

3Com / acquired by HP
networking equipment

In 1973, PARC computer scientists Bob Metcalfe and Dave Boggs invented the Ethernet, a standard for connecting computers over short distances. Metcalfe left PARC in 1979 and founded 3Com Corporation, a manufacturer of computer networking equipment.

 

 

laser printing & more

Xerox
laser printing & more

Over the years, PARC has delivered lasting value to Xerox -- for example, laser printing became a multibillion-dollar business for Xerox. PARC is also the birthplace of Xerox's DocuPrint network printing software, the dual-beam lasers used in many Xerox products, and the scheduling software of the Xerox iGen3™ Digital Production Press. Xerox continues to embed relevant PARC technology into its product and service offerings, including those of its acquired company ACS.

 

 

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