1933–1970 The origins of Canon date back to the founding of
Precision Optical Instruments Laboratory in Japan in 1933 by
Takeshi Mitarai, , and . It became the company
Precision Optical Instruments, Co., Ltd. in 1937. Between 1933 and 1936, 'The Kwanon', a copy of the
Leica design, Japan's first 35 mm focal-plane-shutter camera, was developed in prototype form. In 1940, Canon developed Japan's first indirect X-ray camera. Canon introduced a field
zoom lens for
television broadcasting in 1958, and in 1959 introduced the Reflex Zoom 8 and the
Canonflex. In 1961, Canon introduced the Rangefinder camera,
Canon 7, and 50mm 1:0.95 lens in a special bayonet mount. In 1964, Canon introduced the 'Canola 130', the first Japanese made 10-key
calculator, a substantial improvement on the design of the British
Bell Punch company, which introduced the first fully electronic calculator two years earlier with the Sumlock Anita Mark 8 unit. In 1965, Canon introduced the
Canon Pellix, a
single lens reflex (SLR) camera with a semi-transparent stationary mirror which enabled the taking of pictures through the mirror. File:1934kwanon.png|A logo from 1934 depicting
Bodhisattva Kwan'on File:Kwanon camera (replica) front 2016 Canon Plaza S.jpg|Kwanon camera (replica) with the Kasyapa lens File:Hansa Canon front-top 2016 Canon Plaza S.jpg|Hansa Canon with the
Nikkor 50mm f/3.5 lens File:Canon 7 with 50mm f0.95 IMG 0374.JPG|Canon 7 with the Canon 50mm f/0.95 lens File:Canon Canonet 17 GL-III QL.jpg|Canon Canonet QL G-III 17 File:Canon pellix.jpg|Canon Pellix
1970–2009 In 1971, Canon introduced the
Canon F-1, a high-end SLR camera, and the
FD lens range. In 1976, Canon launched the
Canon AE-1, the world's first camera with an embedded micro-computer. Canon introduced its
Inkjet printer using bubble-jet technology in 1985, one year after Hewlett-Packard. In 1987, Canon introduced its
Canon Electro-Optical System (EOS), named after the goddess of the dawn, along with the
Canon EOS 650 autofocus SLR camera. Also in 1987, the Canon Foundation was established. In 1988, Canon introduced 'Kyosei philosophy'. The EOS 1 Flagship Professional SLR line was launched in 1989. In the same year the EOS RT, the world's first AF SLR with a fixed, semi-transparent pellicle mirror, was unveiled. In 1992, Canon launched the
Canon EOS 5, the first-ever camera with eye-controlled AF, and the PowerShot 600, its first digital camera. In 1995, Canon introduced the first commercially available SLR lens with internal image stabilization,
Canon EF 75-300mm lens f/4–5.6 IS USM. The Canon EOS-RS was the world's fastest AF SLR camera with a continuous shooting speed of 10 frame/s at the time. Based on the EOS-1N, the EOS-1N RS had a fixed, semi-transparent pellicle mirror with a hard coat. In 1996, Canon introduced a pocket-sized digital camera with the
Advanced Photo System, named ELPH in America and IXUS in Europe. Canon entered the digital video camcorder market in 1997. In 2004, Canon introduced the XEED SX50 LCD projector. Canon introduced its first high-definition
camcorder in 2005. In November 2009, Canon made a €730 million (US$1.1 billion) all-cash offer for the Dutch printer maker
Océ. Canon had acquired majority ownership of Océ by March 2010, and completed the acquisition of 100% of shares in Océ by the end of 2011. File:Canon F1 alt.jpg|A Canon F1 File:Canon AE-1 with 50mm f1.8 S.C. II.jpg|A Canon AE-1 File:Canon AV-1 vista frontal.jpg|A Canon AV-1 File:Canon EOS 650.jpg|A Canon EOS 650 File:Ixus-p1010137.jpg|An original Canon Digital IXUS
2010–2019 In 2010, Canon acquired Tereck Office Solutions, Inc. On 16 March 2010, Canon announced that it was seeking to acquire a new
generic top-level domain, acquiring it in February 2015 and using it for the first time on its global website in May 2016. In the third quarter of 2012, Canon's global market share for printers, copiers and multifunction devices was 20.90%. In early 2013, Canon USA moved into a new US$500 million headquarters in
Melville, New York. In February 2014, Canon announced it would acquire
Texas-based Molecular Imprints Inc., a developer of nanoprint lithography systems, for an amount speculated to be around US$98 million. On 13 June 2014, Canon announced it had acquired Danish IP Surveillance VMS software company Milestone Systems. Milestone provides open-platform software to allow video management from various vendors in a single interface; therefore the company will operate as a separate entity. On 10 February 2015, Canon announced that it had intentions to buy Swedish Security Camera maker
Axis Communications for US$2.83 billion. On 23 February 2015, Axis Communications reacted to this news and confirmed that it had received a purchase proposal from Canon. The purchase was effectively completed in April 2015. On 24 April 2015, Canon Europe announced it had acquired the London-based family photo sharing startup Lifecake. In November 2015, in an effort to avoid the selling of gray-market camera gear, Canon USA filed litigation against a number of camera gear retailers. Retailers include Get It Digital, All New Shop and F&E Trading. In March 2016, Canon acquired
Toshiba Medical Systems Corporation for US$5.9 billion. On 28 March 2017, Canon Europe announced it had acquired the London-based printing startup Kite. On 2 April 2019, Canon introduces two new UHDgc 2/3-inch Portable Zoom Lenses designed For 4K UHD Broadcast Cameras.
Since 2020 In July 2020, Canon recorded its first ever quarterly loss due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. In September 2020,
Fujitsu announced that it would provide Canon with a
Fujitsu Supercomputer PRIMEHPC FX1000 unit, to assist with its no-prototype development manufacturing initiative. In December 2020, Canon concluded its photographic-equipment print-ad series named "Wildlife as Canon Sees It". This series of ads began in 1981 in
National Geographic magazine. In October 2023, Canon introduced its new
nanoimprint lithography manufacturing systems, which it claims are simpler and more affordable than
ASML's
extreme ultraviolet lithography systems. The system prints the desired circuit pattern onto the silicon wafer bypassing photolithography and can produce circuits equivalent to 5
nm scale. ==Products==