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Printers Blog : May 2008

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This article sounds exciting at first glance, as it introduces the newest iteration of the old Polaroid camera idea: a handheld camera and printer by Zink Imaging, which will print your digital photos immediately. Snap photos of your friends and get an immediate print, with no developing time!

But I have to go with the article here. How many people still actually print their photos to share them? With the amount of online photo sharing options, from Flicker to MySpace to email to cell phones, photos are so quick, cheap and easy to share that printing almost seems a waste of time and money - at least, printing just for the casual market. Printing photos for formal display or framing will always be viable, but how much quality can you get from a printer that fits in the palm of your hand?

It's an idea that was tremendous in its time, and there are certainly still possibilities, but only time will tell whether it'll be something groundbreaking this time around, or just a new item of passing interest.

The author, Amy Sage, is employed by MyInkPro.com.

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Top 10 Reasons To Go Laser

Posted by elderberries May 22, 2008

Laser printers have long been considered a staple of the workplace, but due to the high cost, large size and lack of color printing options, they haven't been a terribly popular choice for the home user. But those days are growing shorter as laser printer manufacturers release printers more suitable for the home, not only in initial cost, but in size and color printing ability as well. So for those still not convinced there's an alternative to inkjet, we present:

Top 10 Reasons To Go Laser

1. Breaking through the initial cost barrier
Laser printer costs are going down every year, to the point where the difference in comparable products is now less than $100 in many cases. "But inkjet prices are going down too!" you say. Sure they are, but as the difference in initial costs grows more neglible, the next area to look is...

2. Replacement ink/toner, and cost per print
So the printer was cheap, as many inkjet printers are these days. But how much will it cost to fill it? Inkjet cartridges aren't cheap, and color cartridges tend to yield anywhere from 100-450 pages depending on usage (going long times between printing can lower that yield significantly). Granted, black ink tends to go a little farther -- the HP 45 Inkjet Cartridge, for example, claims to print 830 pages, but that still doesn't hold a candle to the 2000-page yield of the HP 12A LaserJet Toner Cartridge. Sure, the toner cartridge costs twice as much, but prints more than twice the pages, requires fewer changes, and creates less waste. Color laser cartridges cost more than black, but with 15,000 pages able to be printed from a single color cartridge, the value is still pretty clear.

3. Higher print speed
Pages are printed much faster on a laser printer than on an inkjet, which is especially helpful in a networked situation where more than one person is using the same printer, or in cases where you're just plain tired of waiting on the printer.

4. Less bleeding and no drying time
Inkjet printers are improving in print quality all the time, but there's still the inescapable fact that an inkjet functions by squirting wet ink onto a page, requiring at least some amount of drying time. In contrast, a laser printer uses heated rollers to fuse a powder to the paper, meaning there's nothing wet to bleed or smear.

5. More add-on options
It's more common to find accessories for laser printers, such as hard drives, optional sheet feeders and paper trays. And on the same note, because of the low initial price of inkjet printers, parts are often difficult to find for many inkjet models, making it necessary to replace the entire printer should something break.

6. Flexibility with print quality
Most inkjets don't have settings that allow you to set the print quality, which means no way to limit the amount of ink used. And considering what we said earlier about the cost of inkjet ink, that can make for a pretty expensive grocery shopping list.

7. More precise and efficient printing
A laser beam is more precise than an inkjet, making it easier to get those high-precision, high-resolution text and black line graphic prints. And not relying on drops of liquid ink (which can bleed, smear, or evaporate) means less ink wasted!

8. Quieter operation
Most laser printers are quieter than inkjets. That, combined with their higher printing speed, can keep them from being an annoyance, especially when printing often or around other people.

9. Longer lasting cartridges
When inkjet cartridges aren't used for a while, they can sometimes dry out, leaving you without ink when you need it, or forcing you to print several copies of the page before you get enough ink flowing to be legible. Laser toner, since it's actually in powder form rather than liquid, won't dry out the same way, again causing less waste.

10. Then last, and certainly also least...
No matter how you say it, the words "frickin' inkjets" don't sound nearly as evil as the words "frickin' lasers."

The author, Amy Sage, is employed by MyInkPro.com.

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Solar power from an inkjet?

Posted by elderberries May 15, 2008

Talk about an exciting leap... according to this press release, Konarka Technologies in Massachusetts has developed a way to print a thin film of solar cells using an inkjet printer. Previous methods required the use of semiconductor technologies, but with this breakthrough, solar-powered clothing and other small uses could be as close as the nearest inkjet.

In the environment we're in now, where every energy credit and every carbon offset is more valuable than ever, I find the idea that we can use solar power in smaller and simpler ways, and create it all using printing technology we already have, nothing less than tremendous.

Disclosure: Amy Sage is employed by MyInkPro.com.

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Looks like Samsung is thinking bigger by getting smaller. Makes sense, considering it's a Korean company, and Asian consumers tend to have a lot less desk space available to them, but this focus on less clutter certainly can't be bad for buyers elsewhere either. With additions like Wi-Fi network connectivity and connections to get rid of networking cords, and a footprint of only 38.4 cm wide, the CLP-310 laser printer series boasts a color laser printer that can fit easily in any workstation.

This article paints a very pretty picture of it, but I found one note interesting. There's a toner-saver mode that will "automatically adjust the toner output, yet not compromise on print quality." Maybe I'm nit-picking, but if it really doesn't compromise on print quality, then shouldn't that mode be on all the time?

Regardless, the move towards more affordable and smaller laser printers definitely seems to tipping the scales for home users.

Disclosure: Amy Sage is employed by MyInkPro.com.

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So here's something you can’t do with inkjet ink!

With solid ink, Xerox has taken a step away from messy cartridges toward a product that’s not only easier to handle, but less likely to dry up over time.

Is it all it’s cracked up to be, though? According to the Xerox site, solid ink is “clean, green, easy and affordable.” Clean because – well -- you can see how clean it is on hands and there’s no cartridge to leak. Green because it creates no cartridge waste and is simpler to create and package. Easy because it simply drops into the printer, “as easy as loading a stapler.” And affordable, as it’s less likely to dry up and the cost-per-print, according to the official site, puts it close to laser toner.

There are a few drawbacks, however, noted around the web. The Wikipedia article on solid ink notes issues with melted wax odor, high energy usage due to heating elements having to stay on to melt the ink, and the danger of damaging the printer by moving it before it’s completed its cool-down process.

I’d love from people who have used it, since it does look fairly revolutionary. Is it worth it?

Disclosure: Amy Sage is employed by MyInkPro.com.

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