Xerox and Blade Runner share the same uneasy question: what remains human, useful, and valuable after the original world has moved on?
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Wednesday, May 6, 2026
Xerox and Blade Runner - By Robert G. Jordan | greg report Ai
Xerox and Blade Runner share the same uneasy question: what remains human, useful, and valuable after the original world has moved on?
Tuesday, May 5, 2026
OFFICE TECH & AI – Artificial Intelligence in Your World: No Experts, Just Opinions
Friday, May 1, 2026
Xerox Is the Canary Now
By Charlie G. Peterson IV | greg report 2027
The old dealer-floor joke had teeth: when HP caught a cold, everyone else got the Zombie Flu.
It worked because HP had mass. Shelves moved when HP sneezed. Toner pricing twitched. Buyers paused. Competitors suddenly found themselves explaining why their “strategic direction” looked suspiciously like a man sweating through his polo beside the demo unit.
That metaphor feels dated now.
Xerox has taken the perch.
Not because Xerox dominates the room. That crown wandered off years ago. Xerox matters because its numbers expose the weak boards underneath the old channel floor: print volume, equipment placements, post-sale revenue, managed print stickiness, debt, service economics, and the nasty question of what happens when a legacy print company buys scale because time has grown expensive.
The Q1 2026 earnings statement opens with a recovery story. Revenue hit $1.846 billion, up 26.7% year over year. Adjusted operating income reached $72 million. Adjusted operating margin climbed to 3.9%, up 240 basis points from last year. Xerox reaffirmed full-year guidance: revenue above $7.5 billion, adjusted operating income of $450 million to $500 million, and free cash flow around $250 million.
Thursday, April 23, 2026
ECS 2026: The Legacy Embedded in the Future
ECS 2026
Twelve years ago, I attended the 2014 ECS. I’m not the only one who can wax nostalgic about an Executive Connection Summit from over a decade ago, but here I am.
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
Post and Walters, Ask Us Anything
This episode of the Crickets show featured Greg, Art, and special guest Keith from PUDU Robotics discussing the company's new products and go-to-market strategy.
Monday, March 30, 2026
You Should Have Seen It When the Copier Was Busy
Art Post
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
How the Copier Industry Reached a Turning Point and Why the Continuum May Be the Road Forward
By Mason Bright | Greg Report Ai 2027
If you want to understand the copier industry, do not start with a market report. Start in a dealer warehouse before sunrise.
The lights hum on one aisle at a time. Service techs drift through the side door grabbing trunk stock for the day. Someone is already arguing across the counter about whether a call should be marked open or closed on the dispatch board. A service manager studies the ticket queue with a cup of coffee that went cold twenty minutes ago.



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