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SmartWare — Buyers Guide ’06 (cont'd)
Printers
The two dominant hard-copy technologies are inkjet and laser printing. Color lasers offer higher speed and lower cost per page for high-volume printing, especially for sharp text and bright, solid colors. Inkjets’ sprayed-on ink tends to bleed or wick into the page (although coated inkjet or photo paper yields much better results), and the multiple passes of an inkjet printhead can produce a banding or stripe effect in solid fills.

Inkjets boast superior quality for photo printing— even though an inkjet’s highest resolution setting, such as 4800 x 1200 dpi, often looks worse than the combination of lower resolution with image enhancement technology such as HP’s PhotoREt, which uses a greater range of color and more precise placement of dots (some as tiny as 1 or 2 picoliters).

With today’s low printer prices, costly ink and toner cartridges are the ultimate in “razor-and-blade” marketing. Look for inkjets that use four or more colored cartridges. The classic quartet is CMYK; some models, such as Canon’s Pixma iP5000, add color-mixing options like light cyan and pigment- or dye-based black. Simpler inkjets have black and tricolor cartridges, the latter of which must be thrown away even if two of its three hues have ink left.

Some lasers apply toner in a single pass. Others are four-pass models with a carousel that finishes monochrome pages quickly, but loops color pages through the printer four times. This means significantly slower color printing.

SIDEBAR: Before you buy
1. Paper-handling options run the gamut from multiple input trays for different types of media to built-in duplex (or double-sided) printing. If your life isn’t limited to letter and legal, large-format printers range from 11 x 17 inch-capable lasers to inkjets that accommodate up to 13 x 19 inch (or full-bleed 11 x 17), as well as specialized jumbo printers for banners and signs.

2. A growing number of both inkjet and laser models have morphed into multifunction, all-in-one peripherals topped by built-in flatbed scanners, letting them serve as scanners, copiers, and in some cases fax machines as well as printers. Inkjet or laser? Duplex printing or memorycard slots? Just a printer, or the extravalue printer/scanner/ copier combo? Whether you’re spending $250 or $2,500, today’s printers let you do in-house what used to take a week’s wait from a print shop. Clockwise (from left): Konica Minolta Magicolor 2400W; Canon Pixma iP5200; Canon Pixma MP500; HP Photosmart 3310; HP Photosmart 8250 Their scanners don’t match the sharpness of dedicated flatbeds, but they’re convenient general-purpose savers of both office space and money.

3. The term “photo printer” can mean either a small, dedicated printer that has flash-memory card slots to read digital camera images for borderless 4 x 6-inch prints, or a generalpurpose inkjet that also has card slots and borderless printing capability (typically up to 8 x 10 inches). Both often provide a small LCD screen to preview, select, and perform cropping, rotating, or minor editing of images— even with no PC connected to the printer.

From top to bottom: Konica Minolta Magicolor 2400W; Canon Pixma iP5200; Canon Pixma MP500; HP Photosmart 3310; HP Photosmart 8250

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