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TallyGenicom was formed in August 2003 with the merger of Tally and GENICOM. At this time, Arsenal Capital Partners was the majority owner. TallyGenicom's U.S.-based assets were acquired by Printronix in 2009. All intellectual property and worldwide distribution rights for the TallyGenicom serial matrix, inkjet and thermal technologies were ...
The intellectual property and worldwide distribution rights for the TallyGenicom serial matrix, inkjet and thermal technologies were retained by TallyGenicom AG and acquired by DASCOM in June 2009. DASCOM Europe now market the full range of the former TallyGenicom brand of serial, passbook and mobile printers under the ‘Tally' brand name.
merged into TallyGenicom TallyGenicom: serial matrix, line matrix, laser, thermal, mobile U.S. assets purchased by Printronix European assets purchased by Dascom TEC Tektronix: Phaser brand solid ink color, dye-sublimation printers printer business acquired by Xerox Teletype Texas Instruments: serial matrix, inkjet, low-end laser, airline ticketing
Printronix was founded in 1974 by Robert A. Kleist and business partners Gordon B. Barrus and David Mayne. Barrus realized there was a capital need for businesses to store all their data via printing, so he quit his job at Data Products and started
A merger of Tally and the residual Genicom was announced on August 3, 2003 under the name Tally-Genicom and this new company, with manufacturing at its Mexican affiliate or by manufacturing partners, is continuing the design and manufacturing support of dot-matrix and shuttle-matrix printers in a portion of the plant formerly occupied by ...
Printronix and TallyGenicom are well-known vendors of comb printers. In 2009, TallyGenicom was acquired by Printronix. Wheel printers
GENICOM's stock was delisted from the NASDAQ in January when stock price went below $1. CEO Paul Winn and Chief Financial Officer James Gale were relieved of their positions in March as the company went into chapter 11 and Shaun Donnellan was brought in as CEO.
Printer business was sold in 1997 to GENICOM (now TallyGenicom), which then produced models bearing the Digital logo. Networking business was sold c.1997 to Cabletron Systems, and subsequently spun off as Digital Network Products Group. DECtalk and DECvoice voice products were spun off, and eventually arrived at Fonix Speech Group.