Katana VentraIP

NCR Voyix

NCR Voyix Corporation, previously known as NCR Corporation and National Cash Register, is an American software, consulting and technology company providing several professional services and electronic products. It manufactured self-service kiosks, point-of-sale terminals, automated teller machines, check processing systems, and barcode scanners.

Formerly

  • National Cash Register
  • AT&T Global Information Solutions

1884 (1884), in Dayton, Ohio, U.S.
Incorporation: 1900 (1900)[1]

David Wilkinson (CEO)

Increase US$3.83 billion (2023)[3]

Decrease US$37 million (2023)[3]

Decrease US$−423 million (2023)[3]

Decrease US$4.99 billion (2023)[3]

Decrease US$25 million (2023)[3]

15,500 (2023)[3]

NCR was founded in Dayton, Ohio, in 1884 and acquired by AT&T in 1991. A restructuring of AT&T in 1996 led to NCR's re-establishment on 1 January 1997, as a separate company and involved the spin-off of Lucent Technologies from AT&T.[4] In June 2009, the company sold most of the Dayton properties and moved its headquarters to the Atlanta metropolitan area in unincorporated Gwinnett County, Georgia, near Duluth.[5][6] In early January 2018, the new NCR Global Headquarters opened in Midtown Atlanta near Technology Square (adjacent to the Georgia Institute of Technology).


In October 2023, NCR Corporation was split into two independent public companies: NCR Voyix legally succeeded NCR Corporation, while the ATM business was spun-off as NCR Atleos.

I-Series: 9010 (IDPS Operating System), 9020 and 9100 (IMOS Operating System), 9040 and 9050 (IRX Operating System), 9200 / 9300 / 9300IP / 9400 / 9400IP / 9500 / System 10000 models 35 / 55 / 65 / 75 (ITX Operating System). These were "I" (Interactive) computers allowing TTY terminals to be connected. Later models supported all industry-standard communication protocols.

V-Series: 8500 () and 9800 (VRX/E Operating System). These were "V" series, comparable to mainframes, supporting "Page mode" terminals. The hardware did have similarities with the I-Series while the operating system and user interface was totally different.

VRX Operating System

Item Processing platforms (mainly ) (7780, iTRAN 8000, iTRAN 300e, iTRAN 180e, iTRAN 300es, iTRAN 180es, TS)

checks

(System 3000)

PCs

Point of Sale (POS)

POS Displays

ATMs and kiosks (EasyPoint, Personas, SelfServ)

Self-service hardware

(S1600, S2600, System 5000, Tower)

Servers

Optic 12, Optic 5

Petroleum POS

CEO: David Wilkinson (October 2023 – present)

[58]

CEO: [59] (April 2018 – October 2023)

Michael Hayford

CEO: (August 2005 – 2018)

Bill Nuti

CEO: (2003–2005)

Mark Hurd

CEO: (1996–2003)

Lars Nyberg

CEO: Jerre Stead (1993–1995) company renamed AT&T GIS

CEO: (1983–1993)

Charles E. Exley, Jr.

CEO: (1973–1984)

William S. Anderson

CEO: (1962–1973)

Robert S. Oelman

CEO: Stanley C. Allyn (1957–1962)

CEO: (1931–1957)

Edward A. Deeds

CEO: Frederick Beck Patterson (1922–1931)

CEO: (1884–1922)

John H. Patterson

Interim CEO: Jim Ringler (2005)

Interim CEO: Bill O'Shea (1995)

Interim CEO: Gil Williamson (1993)

NCR Book Award

Biles, George E. "John Henry Patterson's contributions to industrial welfare". International Journal of Public Administration (1993) 16 (5): 627–647. :10.1080/01900699308524815. ISSN 0190-0692

doi

Friedman, Walter A. "John H. Patterson and the sales strategy of the National Cash Register Company, 1884 to 1922." Business History Review 72.4 (1998): 552–584.

online

Haberstroh, Stacy L. " 'The Sun Never Sets on National Cash Registers': The International Operations of the National Cash Register Company, 1885-1922." (Diss. Miami University, 2013)

online

Nelson, Daniel. "The new factory system and the unions: The National Cash Register Company dispute of 1901." Labor History 15.2 (1974): 163–178.

Schleppi, John R. "'It Pays': John H. Patterson and Industrial Recreation at the National Cash Register Company." Journal of Sport History 6.3 (1979): 20–28.

online

Sealander, Judith. Grand Plans: Business Progressivism and Social Change in Ohio's Miami Valley, 1890-1929 (1988) pp 18–42 on NCR

excerpt

Official website

at the Encyclopædia Britannica

NCR Corporation

NCR IPS UK

Archived 2007-01-24 at the Wayback Machine

Report of Dundee Redundancies

Information on early National registers

Archived 2012-04-02 at the Wayback Machine

Dayton's Code Breakers

Archived 2021-02-11 at the Wayback Machine

The History of Computing Project: NCR Timeline

Archived March 6, 2022, at the Wayback Machine

The Core Memory Project: NCR Computers of the 20th Century

Decision Mate V

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