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The Xerox machine, also known as the photocopier, was invented by Chester Carlson. He invented the process of electrophotography, which is commonly known as xerography. Xerography is a dry photocopying technique that produces a copy of a document by the direct electrostatic transfer of an image onto a photoreceptor and then transferring it onto paper. The first automated xerographic copier, the Xerox 914, was introduced by the Xerox Corporation in 1959, based on Carlson’s invention.