haloid


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Related to haloid: haloid acid

haloid

(ˈhælɔɪd) chem
adj
(Elements & Compounds) resembling or derived from a halogen: a haloid salt.
n
(Elements & Compounds) a compound containing halogen atoms in its molecules; halide
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When Joe Wilson committed his little Haloid Photographic Company to develop xerography, it was a big, intense project.
The mineral resources subject to the law are the following: coal, ferrous ores, non-ferrous ores, aluminum ores and aluminiferous rocks, noble metals, radioactive metals, rare and disperse soils, haloid salts, useful non-metalliferous substances, useful rocks, precious and semiprecious stones, peat, therapeutic muds and peats, bituminous rocks, non-combustible gases, geothermal waters, gases accompanying them, natural mineral waters (gaseous and flat), therapeutic mineral waters, as well as the mining waste product in waste heaps and tailing management facilities.
Xerox emerged from Haloid Photographic, a company that used its knowledge of Kodak film chemistry to make photographic paper.
The company initially known as Haloid Company had their first logo rendered in 1937.
Nokia has therefore been in the communication business right from the start as this company manufactured company logos, that the original word Haloid, which used to be prominent in earlier logos, was gradually replaced in prominence by the word Xerox in the 1948 logo and in the 1949 logo.
1920s, processed in 2010 or Haloid Platina, exact expiration date unknown, ca.
Finally, he met Joe Wilson, the president of a photo paper company called Haloid. Wilson saw the potential and teamed up with Carlson.
In fact, he draws on the storied Xerox, known at its 1906 founding as the Haloid Company, as a prime case.
Finally, in 1960, the Haloid Company, later to be called Xerox, brought photocopies to the public.
The Haloid Co., a photo-paper manufacturer based in Rochester, N.Y., acquired a license to Carlson's patents in 1947 and a year later trademarked what would later become its corporate moniker: Xerox.