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fisher price toy camera simmons binoculars lens microscope circular polarizer sony dvcam camcorder aps zoom camera digital deer cameras alpen scope sewing magnifier binoculars microscope jvc pc camera long eye relief scopes bullet pinhole camera ip digital camera large format lensThis article is about the company "X10 Wireless Technology". For the home automation protocol, see X10 (industry standard).
X10 Wireless Technology, Inc. is an American subsidiary of a Hong Kong-Bermuda company best known for marketing wireless video cameras using controversial pop-under advertisements. It was founded in 1999 in Kent, Washington.
The company's many pop-under windows containing flashing animations in the 2001-2003 advertising campaign for its flagship product, the Amazing X10 Camera, proved to be counter-productive[citation needed] and were seen by many as a nuisance rather than a viable marketing tool[1]. For many Internet users, X10 came to epitomize invasive and bothersome Internet marketing, and instructions for disabling the JavaScript technology used by these windows were circulated.[citation needed]
Contents
1 History
1.1 1974
1.2 1978
1.3 1988
1.4 1989
1.5 1995
1.6 1996
2 Legal and financial problems
3 Parodies
4 References
5 External links
//
History
1974
X10 sprang from a small engineering company in Scotland called Pico Electronics, Ltd. Pico now fits under the umbrella of X10 Ltd. X10 was a founding member of the Home Automation and Networking Association and is sometimes considered the founding father of the home automation industry.
1978
X-10 products were introduced to the American Public through Radio Shack. Soon after, X-10 products were also sold at Sears, Roebuck.
1988
Under the One-For-All brand, X10 started manufacturing universal remotes for Universal Electronics, Inc. (UEI). The operation grew so large that soon X10 was manufacturing 1 million remotes per month. X10 now makes remotes for many original equipment manufacturers (including Philips) and has the best infrared (IR) code library in the business. This makes X10 one of the largest manufacturers of universal remotes in the world.
1989
X10 introduces a self-installed wireless security system: the SS5400.
1995
X10 sets up ORCA Monitoring Services in Seattle, Washington to handle the monitoring of their security systems as well as the ones X10 sells to Radio Shack and other vendors.
1996
X10's website goes live on the Web at http://www.x10.com on December 26th, 1996.
Legal and financial problems
The company was sued in October 2003 by Advertisement Banners.com, who created their pop-up advertisements, for not paying advertising fees as promised. X10 had to pay Advertisement Banners more than US$4.3 million in compensation.[2]
X10 made an attempt to go public in 2001 using the ticker symbol XTEN. They aborted this plan[3] after a copy of Escape from Paradise, a book which revealed that X10's owner Hin Chew Chung had been under house arrest for over a year in Brunei, was sent to the Securities and Exchange Commission. The company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Washington in 2003,[4] and the bankruptcy was confirmed by the Court in April 2005.
Parodies
Due to the pervasiveness of the X10 ads, and the low opinion of them that many Internet users had, there have been several parodies of them.
Something Awful created a page satirizing the design sense of the company,[5] as well as a mock interview with the inventor of the X10 Camera[6]
In one website's humorous timeline of Internet history, "X10 sells its first camera" is a future event that occurs in 2003, one to two years after the timeline is published.[7]
On the KOMPRESSOR album Crush Television there is a song titled We Must Destroy X10 about the X10 ads.
References
^ Dugan, Sean (2002-03-01). "Brought to you by...". http://www.computeruser.com/articles/2103,1,2,1,0301,02.html.
^ "Brothers sue Net company, win $4.3 million". CNN. 2003-10-21. http://www.cnn.com/2003/TECH/internet/10/21/x10.wireless.ap/index.html. Retrieved on 2006-05-02.
^ "X10 Wireless Technology's letter of public offer withdrawal to SEC". Hoover's. http://www.hoovers.com/free/co/secdoc.xhtml?ID=101796&ipage=1501823&doc=1. Retrieved on 2006-05-02.
^ Festa, Paul (October 22, 2003). "X10 files for Chapter 11". CNET News.com. http://news.com.com/2100-1014-5095260.html.
^ "The Amazing 10X Home Surveillance Kit!". Something Awful. http://web.archive.org/web/20020113122509/http://www.somethingawful.com/10x/index.htm. Retrieved on 2006-05-02.
^ "Unsung Heroes of the Internet". Something Awful. http://www.somethingawful.com/articles.php?a=757. Retrieved on 2006-05-02.
^ "The Lemon: History of the Internet". thelemon.net (defunct). http://www.bordergatewayprotocol.net/jon/humor/internet_history/. Retrieved on 2006-05-02.
External links
Jeff Dorsch (2005). X10 Wireless Technology, Inc. company information. Hoover's. http://www.hoovers.com/x10/--ID__101796--/free-co-factsheet.xhtml.
X10 Wireless Technology company website
X10's latest Surveillance Camera
Categories: Electronics companies of the United States | Companies based in Kent, Washington
Hidden categories: All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since March 2008 | Articles with unsourced statements since December 2008
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