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Corporate Social Responsibility
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10.10.2005 ET
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Xerox Names Sophie Vandebroek As Chief Technology Officer, Len Parker As Chief Engineer
(CSRwire) STAMFORD, Conn. - Xerox Corporation (NYSE: XRX) has named Dr. Sophie
Vandebroek to the position of chief technology officer and president of the
Xerox Innovation Group, effective Jan. 1. Len Parker will succeed
Vandebroek as chief engineer.

Vandebroek will drive Xerox's long-term research and development strategy
and lead one of the world's premiere corporate research and technology
organizations. Xerox laboratories have been the breeding ground for
breakthrough innovations like the laser printer, copier and fax and for
the industry's broadest array of digital color printers, multifunction
devices and document-intensive workflow solutions.
She succeeds Dr. Hervé Gallaire, who will retire at the end of this year
after a 13-year career with Xerox.
Vandebroek has been the company's chief engineer and vice president of the
Xerox Engineering Center. In her new role, she will oversee the company's
worldwide research and technology centers and teams of scientists and
engineers with expertise in areas like color marking systems, materials,
digital imaging, and document management services. Xerox has generated a
portfolio of more than 8,000 active patents, representing technical
breakthroughs that strengthen the company's leadership in the document
management industry.
As chief engineer, a position she assumed in 2002, Vandebroek was
responsible for coordinating Xerox's engineering efficiency and
effectiveness, a period during which Xerox refreshed more than 95 percent
of its office product line and launched its flagship iGen3® Digital
Production Press. Prior to that, she served as chief technology officer at
Carrier Corp. From 1991 until 2000, Vandebroek held a number of
increasingly responsible roles at Xerox including technical advisor to
Xerox's chief operating officer and director of the Xerox Research Centre
of Canada. Before joining Xerox, she performed research at the IBM T.J.
Watson Research Center and the Interuniversity Microelectronics Center in
Belgium.
Vandebroek, 43, holds nine patents and is a Fellow of the Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers, a Fulbright Fellow, and a Fellow of
the Belgian-American Educational Foundation. A native of Leuven, Belgium,
Vandebroek earned a master's degree in electro-mechanical engineering from
the Katholieke Universiteit, Belgium, and a doctorate in electrical
engineering specializing in microelectronics from Cornell University in
Ithaca.
Parker, 52, will succeed Vandebroek as vice president of the
Xerox Engineering Center, effective Jan. 1. Parker will be responsible
for Xerox's platform planning and product delivery effectiveness,
providing the tools, processes and engineering competencies to ensure the
continued development of the industry's leading global products and
solutions. He will also oversee Xerox's Intellectual Property Organization
and the company's DocuShare software business.
Parker is currently the chief technology officer of the Production
Systems Group. He joined Xerox in 1980 as an electro-optical laser
engineer and has held several senior engineering and product management
roles, including vice president of Controller Platform & Customer
Operations for office laser printers, vice president and general manager
of the Office Systems Group, and vice president, chief technology officer
of the company's Document Systems & Solutions Group.
He is a graduate of Rochester Institute of Technology, earning a master's
degree in printing technology and a bachelor's degree in imaging
science.
Gallaire has led Xerox's research and technology organization since 1999.
Prior to that, he was director of the Xerox Research Centre Europe in
Grenoble, France.
Gallaire joined Xerox in 1992 with credentials in industry, government and
academia. He headed the department of mathematics and computer science at
l'École Nationale Supérieure de l'Aéronautique et de l'Espace in France
from 1970 to 1980, and he created several private and public research
laboratories in France and Germany.
Xerox Corporation operates research and technology centers in the United
States, Canada and Europe, including the independent but wholly owned Palo
Alto Research Center. For more information, visit www.xerox.com/innovation.
NOTE TO EDITORS: For photos of Dr. Sophie Vandebroek and Len
Parker and for more information about Xerox, visit www.xerox.com/news. XEROX®, iGen3®
and DocuShare® are trademarks of XEROX CORPORATION.
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