Dan Spinner describes the operation of a Xerox copier - begins with him already talking (about Xerox 3600 ?), then does Xerox 4000, IBM 6800 copier and Xerox 1000.Subjects: Xerox 3600/Xerox 4000/Xerox 1000/IBM 6800/Spinner, Dan. Quizes included.
Creator:
Burroughs Corporation
Contributor:
Spinner, Dan
Created:
1976
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Charles Babbage Institute.
This tape was customer supplied, and shows how the cashiering department at this company utilizes Burroughs equipment, including seven S3000 machines, a B1900, and an EA2300.
Creator:
Burroughs Corporation
Created:
1983-04-19
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Charles Babbage Institute.
Presentation stressing advantages of moving up to V series noting compatibility with earlier lines. Similar to BP185 and AP168. Amazing usage of fog and animation in the last few minutes.
Creator:
Burroughs Corporation
Contributor:
Balduf, Carl
Created:
1986-11-14
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Charles Babbage Institute.
This is a short talk by Jim McCarty, Burroughs Financial Marketing, about the TR/TT Teller's machines, and it includes Burroughs' philosophy ("Every teller should function through a teller machine unit") , marketing strategy, and a demonstration.
Creator:
Burroughs Corporation
Contributor:
McCarty, Jim
Created:
1986?
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Charles Babbage Institute.
This video covers the benefits to Burroughs of using video presentations (for customers, for use internally, for employee communication, speech rehearsals for executives, education, and new employee orientation.
This tape reviews the capabilities of the S1000 system, and explains how it has become the most popular remittance processing system today. It actually appears to be a practice session, with several retakes.
Creator:
Burroughs Corporation
Created:
1981-03-25
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Charles Babbage Institute.
This is a training tape for customers that includes the more advanced features, and troubleshooting tips for the reader/sorter. Visually lower quality than part 4, parts are unreadable.
Creator:
Burroughs Corporation
Created:
1973
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Charles Babbage Institute.