The Xerox 9700 was a high-end laser printer manufactured by Xerox Corporation beginning in 1977.[1] Based on the Xerox 9200 copier, the 9700 printed at 300 dots-per-inch on cut-sheet paper at up to two pages per second (pps), one- or two-sided, that is simplex or duplex, landscape or portrait.

Xerox 9700 Electronic Printing System
Introduced1977; 47 years ago (1977)
TypeLaser printer
Dots per inch300x300
Speed120ppm

Description

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The 9700 was intended for high-volume applications. It included a disk drive and a modified Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) PDP-11/34[2] as a print controller and rasterizer. It could connect to an IBM mainframe via a parallel channel. It offered an input tray that could hold up to 2500 sheets of paper (20lb bond/75gsm) and an auxiliary input tray for an additional 400 sheets. It had two output stackers, each capable of holding 1500 sheets. An operator control console consisted of a CRT display terminal and keyboard. It optionally included a 9-track tape drive which could be used to load documents for printing, to supply software and bitmapped fonts, or run backups.[3]

The 9700 had separate imaging units for each side of the paper, which allowed it to print simplex or duplex with no decrease in speed.

Historic importance

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The Xerox 9700 played a part in the beginning of the Free Software movement: In 1980, Richard Stallman and some other hackers at the MIT AI Lab were refused access to the source code for the software of a newly installed Xerox 9700. Stallman had modified the software for the Lab's Xerox Graphics Printer, a xerographic experimental raster printer,[4] so it electronically messaged a user when the person's job was printed, and would message all logged-in users waiting for print jobs if the printer was jammed. Not being able to add these features to the new printer was a major inconvenience, as the printer was on a different floor from most of the users. This experience convinced Stallman of people's need to be able to freely modify the software they use, thus the launch of the Free Software movement.[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Damer, Bruce. "The Story of the Xerox 9700 Electronic Printing System". DigiBarn Computer Museum. Retrieved May 21, 2014.
  2. ^ Paul A. Strassmann (2008). Paul's Odyssey: America, 1945-1985. Strassmann, Inc. pp. 259–. ISBN 978-1-60643-018-7.
  3. ^ "Xerox 9700". Everything2. Retrieved May 21, 2014.
  4. ^ McJones, Paul (2017-11-09). "Xerox Alto file system archive". Computer History Museum. Retrieved 2024-02-05. In the meantime, various people at Xerox were building a series of experimental raster printers. The first of these was called XGP, the Xerox Graphics Printer, and had a resolution of 192 dots to the inch. Xerox made XGP's available to certain universities, and by 1972 they were in use at Carnegie-Mellon, Stanford, MIT, Caltech, and the University of Toronto. Each of those organizations produced its own hardware and software interfaces. The XGP is historically interesting only because it is the first raster printer to gain substantial use by computer scientists, and was the arena in which a lot of mistakes were made and a lot of lessons learned.
  5. ^ Williams, Sam (2002). Free as in Freedom: Richard Stallman's Crusade for Free Software. O'Reilly Media. ISBN 0-596-00287-4. Chapter 1. Available under the GFDL in both the initial O'Reilly edition (accessed on October 27, 2006) and the updated FAIFzilla edition . Retrieved October 27, 2006.
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