Showing posts with label heavy printer paper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heavy printer paper. Show all posts

HP Officejet 5510 All-in-One Printer

HP Officejet 5510 All-in-One Printer
  • Up to 17 ppm print speed, up to 17 copies per minute
  • Color printing, copying, scanning, and faxing
  • Up to 600 x 2,400 dpi optical scan resolution, 36 bit color depth, 4,800 x 1,200 maximum optimized print resolution
  • USB interface, PC and Mac compatible

All things being equal, I would have to call the HP OfficeJet 5510 one of the best all-around printers / copiers / scanners around. I have reviewed enough all-in-one units now to appreciate a great model when I get to play with one, and after a month of testing, I can honestly say that the OfficeJet 5510 has really impressed me.

Printing is probably the main reason anyone would purchase this unit. The print quality is simply fantastic. Printing text-only pages is very, very fast, much quicker than I was expecting from an ink-jet printer. So quick, in fact, that my nine-year old daughter even commented on it just this morning. I used the OfficeJet 5510 to print out a letter to her school. She asked which printer it would come out, and I pointed to the HP. It was done printing just a few seconds later. Her reaction? "Wow, that was a lot faster than the silver and black printer." The silver and black printer being the Lexmark 5150 I reviewed back in June 2003.

Fast is not always good if the print quality is not up to par. The OfficeJet 5510 has nothing to fear. Using standard high-gloss photo paper and printing a photo from iPhoto, I was simply amazed at the print quality. I have printed many full-page color photos over the last few years, and I can honestly say that the OfficeJet 5510''s print quality is one of the best for an ink-jet printer. While no speed demon printing a full-page color print, the print time was respectable.

Paper is loaded from the bottom front of the unit, so it is much easier to see how much paper you have left at a quick glance. Not so with a rear, upwards facing paper tray such as those found on most Lexmark, Epson, and other printers. I much prefer a lower-front loading tray to the other types. My only grip here is that there is no protective cover for the paper tray, meaning that if you don''t print something every few days, dust will accumulate, and be run through your printer when you do.

Be aware that the OfficeJet 5510 is not a post-script printer; so graphic professionals will want to look elsewhere. There is also no built-in print sharing with the OfficeJet 5510, nor is it compatible with Rendezvous, but you can share it via USB Print Sharing built-in to OS X.

Speaking of OS X, if you are not using Mac OS X or Mac OS 9.1, and are still a happy OS 9.0 or earlier user, you are out of luck. Like many programs and hardware coming out as of late, the OfficeJet 5510 is not compatible with pre-OS X operating systems. Nor is it compatible with Windows 95, NT, 3.1, or DOS, either.)

Scanning is done via the HP Director software, which you can only get from the included CD-ROM. To deviate from the standard review process for a moment, I would like to point out that HP, while having great products for the most part, has a woefully inadequate support website. The above mentioned HP Director software cannot be downloaded via their website. When Mac OS X 10.3 was released, I had some initial problems printing to the OfficeJet 5510. The problem was unrelated to the HP software, but in my search for a cure I did learn of the poor quality of HP''s support pages. What happens if I loose or scratch my HP CD-ROM? I have to order another one. And as of today''s date, there is still no software update for the software on HP''s website. The same software, HP Director, also controls their digital cameras with their HP Director (Camera). There is also no update for that program online, even though I cannot get it to work under 10.3 correctly. For a company the size and with the reputation they have, I expect better from HP.

Getting back to the OfficeJet 5510 and scanning, I have found that the scanning works great. While I don''t especially like the scanning software the OfficeJet 5510 ships with, it does work well. You can access the software directly through Adobe Photoshop as well, via the Import-HP All-in-one Scan in the File menu. You can scan photos or documents from 150x150 DPI up to 19200x19200 DPI. The flatbed scanner performs about the same as most other scanners (and copiers) in this price-range, and there is nothing here. It work fine, has an auto-crop feature, etc...

The true strength of scanning, however, if the 20-page top-load automatic document feeder on top of the OfficeJet 5510. You can set the printer to scan multiple documents (not pictures) up to 20 pages, which is a great feature, one many small or home business users will appreciate.

Usually, when reviewing a multi-function printer / scanner / fax machine, the fax aspect is the least impressive. Using built-in fax software, you have to have your computer turned on to control, send, or receive a fax. Not so with the OfficeJet 5510! HP, realizing how nice it would be to be able to send and receive faxes, has taken the need to have a computer out of the equation. Simply plug the OfficeJet 5510 into your phone jack, and you can control all the fax features from the built-in LCD display. This is a great feature, one I overlooked when my testing first started. I now feel that this is one of the best selling points to the unit, and one I did not realized I missed so much from other units.

Specification:

Print quality 1200 x 1200 dpi

Connectivity: USB

Print speed, black: Up to 17 ppm

Print speed, color: Up to 12 ppm

Compatible operating systems: Microsoft Windows 98, 98 SE, 2000, Me, XP; Macintosh OS 9.1, OS X

Scanner type: Flatbed

Automatic document feeder 20 sheets

Media sizes: Letter, legal, executive, cards, 3 x 5 to 8.5 x 14 in (using ADF)

Color fax: yes

Fax transmission speed: 3 sec per page

Fax memory: 90 pages

Fax autoredial: Yes

Fax PC interface: Yes (sending only

Fax auto-reduction: Yes

Fax delayed sending: Yes

Copy speed, black: Up to 17 cpm

Copy speed, color: Up to 12 cpm

Copy settings: Stand-alone copying: fit-to page (from glass only), 100%, reduce/enlarge

Maximum number of copies: Up to 99 copies

Bit depth: 36 bit

Levels of grayscale: 256

Software included: HP Photo and Imaging Gallery: HP Director, HP Photo Gallery, HP Image Editor, HP Instant Share, HP Photo Prints, HP Creative Projects, HP Quick 4 x 6 prints, HP Memories Disc DVD Creator, ReadIris OCR, HP Send to Programs

Dimensions (w x d x h) 18 x 11.3 x 9.25 in (18 x 17.8 x 9.25 with tray fully extended)

Weight: 11.8 lb

Warranty: One-year limited hardware warranty backed by HP Customer Care, service and support; one-year technical phone support, plus a toll-free number in North America only

This is a great printer for both the new and veteran computer user wanting an all-in-one printing solution. Fantastic execution in functionality and usability. Small, compact design in an attractive package.

Well worth the money and investment.

MyMac Rating: 5 out of 5

Buy HP Officejet 5510 All-in-One Printer Now

In search of a machine that would be compact and efficient enough to serve as an all around tool, I researched several brands and models that are with-in the less than $250 price range.

I''ve always find it cost effective to go to Costco to get prints off of my digital camera rather than print pictures on a color laser or inkjet printer, so photo quality was not a concern in my quest. I did however require an auto-document feeder, which comes in extremely handy when faxing pages and pages of documents.

Dell had the A960, which is a spin-off of the Lexmark X6170. These printers caught my attention but upon reading the specifications (lack of fax memory), seeing it up-close and after inspecting the prints it produced, I had to find something better. I looked at and tested Brother''s $149.00 entry to the "all-in-one" market but aside from having a slow fax modem (14.4kbps), plasticky and flimsy looking, the prints were not too good either. Personally, I prefer Epson printers because of overall performance, print quality and design, but since Epson''s all-in-one does not come with fax capabilities, I turned to HP.

HP offers several all-in-one models with auto-document feeder to choose from starting from this 5500 series all the way to the 7100 series, which cost a lot more. I did not need the built-in card readers, wanted a very small overall footprint and wanted something affordable so I chose the HP5510v. I tried the 6100 series as well and aside from having more on-board buttons it slightly has an edge over the 5510 in terms of print quality. Bear in mind though that I had the prints inches away from my face trying to compare and scrutinize the differences. In the end $100+ difference between the 2 was more noticeable.

I have Win XP on my machine and I would have to say that setup was simple and easy enough if you follow the setup poster to the letter. Other reviewers had issues with driver setup and had to call HP customer support and got connected to a tech person in India, which in the end caused more problems. I''m guessing that because we''ve been so accustomed to hooking up the new device first before installing the driver/software, people tend to do just that. With the 5510, you have to begin installation of the printer driver/software using the CD first, and then wait until it instructs you to connect the printer to your PC. So make sure you read the instructions carefully.

The install CD uses a chunk of your hard disk space if you want everything installed. You can however opt to have just the drivers installed. Doing so will save you hundreds of Megs. You can also download installers from the HP website. I did that and burned the drivers on a CD just incase, but the supplied install CD worked just fine.

After installing the driver/software, I was able to do pretty much everything the all-in-one promised. However, I have not tested the fax function yet. I also noticed after installation that by pressing the scan button repeatedly, it cycles through my PC''s installed photo editing software even Word! This allows you to dictate the scanner where to send the scanned image immediately after scanning. The time and date on the printer''s LCD screen also adjusted automatically based on the time and date I have on my PC!

If you have an answering machine on the same telephone number, make sure you follow the manual on how to hook it up so that the fax machine can still receive faxes by "listening" to incoming messages and detect a fax tone while your answering machine is recording. I have yet to test this feature but I think HP did a great job and did everyone a favor by doing this.

Prints from the 5510 surprisingly came out very nice looking even on draft mode and on plain paper. Scanning using the auto-document feeder is not the fastest but was not slow either. It produced a very crisp and clear scanned image directly onto my software of choice destination. Copying in fast mode produced a good enough copy of my son''s colored school calendar, which is now held by a couple of magnets against our refrigerator door. Like I said, I will have to test the fax capabilities although it does sport a fast 33.6kbps modem and supports black and color faxing, enabling you to transmit and receive color faxes.

All in all, I am very happy with this HP5510v all in one. However ...

Cons:

I knew it did not come with a USB cable so I had to get that before the printer arrived. Fortunately I knew where to get a USB cable cheaper as those things can run from $24 and up adding to the cost of the printer!

When I was doing the pen alignment utility feature as per the printer''s instructions, it could not find the pen alignment sheet on the scanner when I tried to follow the paper orientation as shown on the setup poster. I did that several times and no luck. I finally rotated the paper 180 degrees; the printer scanned it and finally said, "alignment complete". It''s funny because the same thing happened when I tested the pen alignment feature on one of the store''s display model.

The HP inks for this machine, as everybody else noted can cost a lot of money. So make sure you find the best deals when you shop for HP inks.

Enjoy and HP(Happy Printing)!

>>>>>> UPDATE: September 28, 2004

Invent It! Photo Calendar Kit

Invent It! Photo Calendar Kit
  • 15 sheets of 2-sided photo paper
  • Print-and-stick project paper
  • Heavyweight paper and plastic covers
  • Easy-to-use spiral binding
  • Create your own calendar

I bought three of these calendar kits in November of 2000 and gave them as Xmas presents when completed.

The kit contains heavyweight paper for the cover(s) and 15 pages with glossy paper on one side and matte on the other. The glossy side means your photos can be printed at the highest photo-quality setting of your printer, and the matte side (for the month''s grid of days) permits easy writing. That is the major draw of the kit. If there is a glossy/matte printable paper out there, I don''t know of it (a trip to Kinkos would take care of the binding). The pages are pre-cut with a hole to hang the thing from and holes for the plastic binder. Two clear plastic covers are included, as well as two sheets of sticker paper, to print stickers for placement on the finished calendar. I didn''t use them.

I have considerable, but non-professional, computer experience, and I found the calendar kit to be a good experience. I composed a calendar of our two daughters, with 12 monthly photos and a cover photo. I used 3.3 Mega-pixel digital images from my new Sony S-70 digital camera at full resolution, and included them at 8"x10" size. High quality images are a must for good results. After constructing the January graphics, I simply altered it for the other months. In total, you need 12 month grids, 12 month photos, cover photo or graphic, and rear cover graphic (if desired).

A couple of caveats. First, large photos, particularly dark ones, chew up printer ink. Be prepared to feed your printer ink cartridges. Try to use photos without a lot of dark background, or consider smaller sizes. I decided to pass up on a beautiful photo of a Halloween pumpkin that had an extensive black background. Secondly, I had some difficulty getting the paper to feed into my HP 722 smoothly. I think the printer may not be used to feeding paper with the glossy side DOWN, as is required to print on the matte side. As a result, the printing was tricky, I lost a couple of pages (you get three extra), and it took a lot of time. The large photos, as usual, take a long time to print. I don''t recommend doing more than a couple of kits in a short period. Let the relatives compete for your affections. Finally, the heavyweight covers are very nice, but one side is matte white and the other is DARK BLUE (Argh! They should change that, and make one white/white, for the front cover/January). I used one for December/back cover (the "copyright" on the blue side), but used a glossy/matte month page for the front cover/January, with a clear cover on top of it. One less screw-up possible, then.

If you need software to compose your calendar, they offer an "Invent It! Photo Calendar Plus" version that includes the software. I used my own Corel Print House program, so I can''t comment upon the "Plus" version.

The results? My mother-in-law said it was "the best present she had ever received," and my Dad said that one of the pictures of our older daughter "brought a tear to his eye." Enough said.

Buy Invent It! Photo Calendar Kit Now

I purchased my first calender kit a few months back.The first kit I bought was the Photo Calender Plus with the software. And of course I had to try it right away. It is very easy to use. And the prepunched pages are great it saved me a lot of time. I really couldn''t believe how easy these calenders were to make. And the finished product is just fabulous. I have family and friends who saw my calender. And just had to have one too. I have purchased at least 35 Photo Calender Kits in just the last two months. I really want to thank Invent It this is one great kit. It is easy to use, you get enough pages so if you do make a mistake you don''t end up short,they give ideas on how to lay out your calender and sticker pages too. I plan to keep using this kit for all my calenders...

Read Best Reviews of Invent It! Photo Calendar Kit Here

For four years we''ve been producing family calendars for Christmas gifts. The first year we let Kinko''s do it all for us. That was easy but you only get 1 photo per month with no graphics or other frills. The second year we found some matte/flat paper and printed things on the computer and let Kinko''s bind it for us. That was the worst of both worlds and finding that paper again is impossible.

Last year I found these kits and bought one with the software. The software wasn''t too helpful to me (being the control freak that I am) but the kit itself it wonderful! 15 pages for the calendar, clear plastic or blue paper covers, and a binding. It is literally the perfect set of supplies for this type of project. I used 5 kits last year and may use even more this time. After all, once you get the design down why not make a lot!

I use Calendar Creator and MS Publisher to make the calendar and photo displays. You could use their software if you want. Either way, the paper, covers, and binding in this package are the only way to make calendars with your printer.

I highly recommend this to anyone. I''ve tried the alternatives and this is the best!

Want Invent It! Photo Calendar Kit Discount?

I bought 6 of these last year and made them into Christmas gifts for my family. They were a BIG hit!! The kits are extremely easy to use and you get extra paper in case you goof. I am planning on buying even more this year for Christmas gifts. I used to buy photo calenders through the mail and this is a LOT easier, faster and CHEAPER than that. (Plus, the results are just as good if not better)!

Nothing is nicer than receiving a gift made especially for you. I love crafting but to my embarrassment, I am "craft disabled"!

I take snapshot photographs as a hobby and inundate my sisters and brothers in law and my chidren''s grandparents and their great grandmother with pictures of my kids regularly.

Thus purchasing this calendar kit was ideal for me!

I''m adept at using the computer for word processing, using the internet and creating and maintaining spread sheets, but haven''t done a lot yet with photographs and graphics. Thus, this was a completely new program for me to learn. The directions are clear (I''ve had problems understanding or have found some instructions so complex, I become intimidated and don''t use them, this was not the case with this package.)and it''s easy and fun to use.

I purchased a few of these calendar kits (THEY COST LESS THAN PURCHASING A PRE-PRINTED BOOKSTORE PICTURE CALENDAR, GREAT BUY!). Then I separated my favorite photos and organized them by month (photos of the kids playing in the snow for January, dressed in red [Valentine''s Day] for February, on Santa''s lap for December, etc.) Then I inserted photos of my children with the intended calendar receipient throughout the remainder of the calendar (people LOVE having pictures of themselves!).

This way, family and friends see photographs of my little ones and are reminded of us throughout the year. I ULTRA personalized all of my family''s calendars, including printing everyone''s birthdays, special family dates and anniversaries thereon (With telephone numbers!), which was REALLY appreciated by all.

Finally, for me, this was a really fun craft to do, I really enjoyed making the calendars. This kit is a perfect vehicle to be artistically creative for those of us who are "artistically impaired". The final, finished products look sleek and professionally made, which is always a plus when having made gifts for presentation to others (without embarrassing yourself!).

Everything is included: 15 sheets of heavyweight, 2 sided photo paper (one side is for the picture, the reverse for the calendar), Heavyweight paper and clear plastic covers, Print & stick project paper, Easy to use spiral binding, PLUS, you can create and add stickers for special days & events using the included print & stick project paper.

To actually make the photo calendar you just plan your calendar by selecting images for both glossy and matte coated sides of each sheet. Then check your printer manual for instructions on loading and feeding heavyweight photo paper. Then test your design by printing on a sheet of plain paper. If satisfied, set printer driver to the appropriate setting for either gloss or matte side. You then place one sheet of photo paper in the printer. They recommend printing the matte side first. Allow paper to dry completely before printing on the reverse side. If desired, create and add stickers for special days & events using the print & stick paper. Choose either heavyweight paper or clear plastic covers for your calendar. Snap on the sprial binder and you''re ready to display or present!

HIGHEST RECOMMENDATION for the perfect, home-made gift that the receipient will use and keep!

Galerie Gold Fibre Silk Inkjet Paper, 17" x 40'' Roll

Galerie Gold Fibre Silk Inkjet Paper, 17'' x 40'' Roll
  • Enhanced definition, extended tonal range, and excellent archival properties

Service was good from Amazon no problems.If you have never worked with roll paper before like me it will take a little getting use to.The paper does have a tough curl to it.Other than that it worked great.I printed some panoramic shots and it worked well.

Thermal Printer Cleaning Cards, Lot of 25

Thermal Printer Cleaning Cards, Lot of 25
  • Improves print quality and legibility of thermal printer
  • Pre-saturated alcohol base card protects your equipment - increases printer life, reliability and performance
  • Works on all thermal printers
  • Use before inserting each roll of paper
  • Safely removes all dirt, ink, tape, residue, adhesive and other contaminants from thermal printer heads, paper guides and paper path

Alcohol soaked pads didn''t make any difference to my printers. Waste of money. Don''t bother with this product unless you get it when you get printer new.

Buy Thermal Printer Cleaning Cards, Lot of 25 Now

I am an ebay power seller who prints hundreds of labels each month. I''ve had the excellent Brother QL-570 for 3½ years, and it had worked faithfully even though I''ve never cleaned it. Brother QL-570 Thermal Label Printer

I recently started getting heavy streaks on my labels. I ordered these and when I used them, I had an immediate improvement in print quality. Like new. Problem solved.

I would definitely recommend these cleaning cards.

HP Officejet Pro 8500A Wireless e-All-in-One (CM755A#B1H)

HP Officejet Pro 8500A Wireless e-All-in-One
  • Get a better value for frequent printing with high-capacity, individual ink cartridges.^
  • Connect to your network wirelessly or with built-in Ethernet, or to your PC with Hi-Speed USB 2.0.
  • Use business apps and the easy-to-use 2.36-inch touchscreen to print from the Web without a PC.
  • Consume up to 50% less paper with automatic two-sided printing and robust digital faxing options
  • Easily view and print from a USB drive and memory cards.
  • Get a better value for frequent printing with high-capacity, individual ink cartridges.

Received as part of the Amazon Vine reviewer program, the HP Officejet Pro 8500A is a wireless, all-in-one (printer, fax, scanner, copier, web) office tool. It uses the current touchscreen technology to offer the user a way to fax, scan, copy and print without the use of a computer directly attached to it.

SET-UP:

Once I unboxed this beast (it''s quite a bit heavier and larger than my previous printer: HP Officejet 6310 All-in-One Printer), it took a few minutes to check the box contents and untape parts that were immobilized as part of packaging.

A very basic (10) step sheet with pictures and minimal directions directs you how to install the two print heads, four ink cartridges, the HP automatic two-sided printing accessory (duplexer) and load the paper. It also shows you for PC or Mac computers how to hook up the printer via a usb cord, ethernet (internet cord) or via a wireless home network (found in the Getting Started Guide).

Once you power up the printer it takes approximately 20 minutes to go through a series of checks prior to asking you if you want to ''update''. As I''d already established a wireless connection with the printer by following the prompts on the touchscreen and entering my home network''s security code, I had it do an update which took about 5 minutes. All in all, the 25-30 minutes the all-in-one spent getting ready for use was no big deal. It took me about 45 minutes to get it set-up prior to that time, and I''m fairly savy about such things. The directions that come with it rely heavily on drawings and had to be referred to frequently at least for me.

So a little over an hour into set-up I installed the software on my primary computer. This took about 10 minutes. Later I also went to the HP site and got the very basic drivers (a 64MB download) for the printer to install on 2 laptops (Vista 64-bit and Windows 7), 1 netbook (Windows XP) and 2 desktops (Vista 64-bit and Windows XP). All the computers installed the drivers quickly and easily, and once installed printed wirelessly off the 8500A. I was amazed with that one... no hic-ups with drivers?!

I also went to iTunes and got a free app: HP iPrint Photo. Once loaded on your iTouch or iPhone you can use it to send photos or documents to print to this printer, or any HP printer (I''m assuming other non-HP printers won''t work with this app) connected to your network. It worked with both the 8500A and the 6300 (hardwired to my router).

Between the unboxing, untaping, installing of ink and printer heads, the all-in-one''s auto set-up and software installation, getting this one up and running took about 1.5 hours. That''s much longer than most printers I''ve wrestled with in the past, but I did take my time and gently worked each step.

The only device I did not get linked to the 8500A was my phone: Nokia E71 Unlocked Phone with 3.2 MP Camera, 3G, Media Player, GPS with Free Voice Navigation, Wi-Fi, and MicroSD Slot--U.S. Version with Warranty (White). I tried multiple times to get it to recognize the printer, but thus far, nothing. I''ll continue to work on it.

FEATURES per the box:

+Printing speeds equivalent to laser printers (35ppm black and 34ppm color max).

+Water resistant-inks.

+Wireless networking.

+35 page automatic document feeder (ADF)

+Automatic two-sided printing; saving time and paper

+4800 x 4800 dpi, 48-bit color scanning

+App printing via touchscreen print directly from the web without a computer

+Printing from anywhere via mobile devices using HP ePrint (the printer has its own email addresss)

+Front panel usb port and memory card slots for digital cameras

+Fax to network folder, to PC and PC Fax Send.

++ Eco-friendly solution, offering 50% lower cost per page than other similar all-in-one printers.

"What does all this mean?" Ideally, if you buy this one you''ll get a wireless printer, scanner, copier, fax machine, that may cost you a bit less to print the same number of pages with another printer and gives you laser printer quality and speed. At least in theory, but time will tell if that pans out.

What I liked about it...

+The machine is good-looking. Sleek, glossy black with a color touch screen.

+The touch screen itself is small, but responsive and quick.

+It can be placed anywhere in your home or office as long as your wireless network connection is adequate.

+The flatbed scanner allows for legal sized documents.

+You can scan your ID getting both sides at the same time on one page very cool!

+The print quality is excellent.

+The print speed is fast.

+Connectivity with my iTouch via HP''s app.

+Scanning is very quick and the quality is excellent.

+Printer drivers installed quickly and easily via HP.com download on all my computers running Vista 64-bit, XP Home and Windows 7 without a hitch!

+You can copy or print without a PC attached and ''on'', via the touch screen.

+Touchscreen animation will show you how to clear a paper jam, step-by-step. Had one...watched the little show and fixed it.

What I disliked about it...

The machine took a long time to set-up for initial use, and it goes through a lot of checks (for about 30-60 seconds) before it can be used if powered off and turned back on.

Makes a lot of noise while it''s printing! Thankfully...it prints quickly, and it isn''t as noisy while scanning, copying or faxing.

-The size is a bit bigger than I''d hoped for and it weighs about 25 pounds, but it does a lot and ''compact'' was not one of its selling points.

The printing of photos is nice, but leaves regular paper soggy. You need to use HP Premium Presentation Paper or HP Premium Photo Paper, glossy (100 sheets, 4 x 6-inch borderless) to get the right look and feel.

Time will tell if ink costs are less or not, but to replace all the cartridges at one time will be a bit expensive. HP 940xl Black, Regular Capacity Cyan, Magenta, Yellow Not overly expensive when compared with other HP ink cartridges, so I wonder where the claim ''50% lower cost per page'' comes from?

-HP included software has some unnecessary stuff on it that loads on your computer if you''re not aware enough of what to ''uncheck'' to stop it before you install the software. HP is notorious for this type of thing and can be very irksome.

-The HP Apps installed on the machine are minimal at this time. You can print off daily news stories from Yahoo, weather reports, puzzles, recipes, etc..., but for me, at least right now, the apps are more fluff than substance. You have to go online to do your settings and establish an ''email address'' for your printer, instead of using the touchscreen to do all of it. Sort of defeating the purpose of the screen and wireless capabilities at least for setup.

-HP Apps failed to work every time. When I tried to get a daily summary for Yahoo, it couldn''t retrieve the info. I went to the HP ePrintCenter online, and it said my printer was offline. I refreshed it and it still didn''t work. I then turned off my printer and turned it back on. It was then recognized online and printed via the app within 5 seconds. This was after I had setup my account and HP said all was well. **A few bugs need to be worked out, but this is probably a network/software glitch and may be just with the Yahoo app.

My CONCLUSION:

It''s a good e-All-in-One with cool web and file transfer possibilities, but a noisy printer. The cost is a bit high for a wireless all-in-one, but the web features and eco-friendly printing may be worth the price boost.

I''m excited to have a wireless printer that installed so easily on my home network and can be placed anywhere in my home. I love the scanner, and look forward to scanning old photos more quickly than my old scanner.

I also like the ability to send photos from my iTouch or iPhone to the printer wirelessly. The touchscreen was a great addition and it works well. It''s a stand-alone device in many ways, and doesn''t need to be tethered to a computer to copy or fax, which I like too.

Overall, the Officejet Pro 8500A Wireless e-All-in-One seems to be a solidly built office tool that will appeal to home office users and families who want its many functions and a lower cost per page.

NOTE RE: Nokia E71 phones, printing wirelessly...

After much research and little assistance I lucked out and figured out the right configuration for printing from the Nokia phone. In your ''printers'' on your phone, set up a new printer using these settings.

Printer: any name...

Driver: HP Mobile Printing

Bearer: LPR

Access point: make sure this is whatever network name your wireless printer is currently using.

Host: this is to be set to your printer''s IP address.

User: also known as ''hostname''.

Queue: I put in the name of my network (SSID).

Printer model: ''officejet'' printers

I can''t print using the Ovi store''s HP iPrint Photo app, but the above stated worked for me on about a 3 second delay to the printer. This fix may also work for other Nokia smartphones and HP printers.

UPDATE: July 25, 2011

This is still my ''go to'' printer and the one networked to all the other computers and wireless devices on my home network (10 in all). Ink costs have been very low as it does seem to sip versus suck down ink. Print quality has not suffered because of it and I''ve been very happy with print quality on regular paper as well as photo paper.

After updating one computer from Vista to Windows 7 I did run into an occasional problem. The printer would forget that it was on the network and I would have to do the ''search for new printer'' thing to get it recognized. Recent Win 7 updates seem to have fixed this problem.

Another issue has been with the ''scan to computer'' feature. It won''t do it via the network, instead I have to put in a media device and transfer the file to that before taking it over to the computer. A pain, and probably something to do with security settings on the network that I''ve just not figured out yet. I did upgrade my wireless router and that may be an issue with those two not getting along.

Overall I''m still very pleased with this printer. I see it as a great choice for busy families, a home office or a college dorm room.

UPDATE: August 28, 2011

Printer problems continued regarding the driver, until a recent update. The printer asked if I wanted to install the update, and when I OK''d it, it installed it and things have been smooth sailing ever since regarding commands from the PC and the touchpad.

A reoccurring issue is that occasionally the mechanism that grabs the paper to print doesn''t engage and when I attempt to assist it, a jam occurs. This is frustrating, but not a deal breaker. I find that less paper in the holder helps to make this an infrequent event.

Another reoccurring issue is that when I go to scan from the touchpad and send the scan to a USB drive I''ve placed into the port on the memory card reader, I get ''memory card error''. Doesn''t seem to matter if it''s a freshly formatted drive or not, and the only thing that seems to clear the error is to restart the machine with the USB drive plugged in versus plugging it in after it''s already ''on''.

Ink longevity with this one is tremendous! Perhaps one of its greatest strengths. The ink costs are high by comparison to some printers, but they seem to last forever so I think it all works out in the end.

UPDATE: 12/2712

Printer is still kicking along nicely, however issues with dropped wifi connectivity have plagued me with this one. I tried assigning it a static IP address, and it would still lose the connection. Oh it says ''connected'' and ''ready'', but won''t print. A reinstallation of the drivers for this series works temporarily, but not for long.

Today I noted that drivers for this model were not showing up in my Windows 7 driver updates. I chose the closest to it I could find for the HP Officeject Pro K850, and so far, it''s working. I don''t know what''s up, but I''m holding my breath and crossing my fingers.

Buy HP Officejet Pro 8500A Wireless e-All-in-One (CM755A#B1H) Now

I have been using the basic HP desk-jet printer for a long time and never thought of upgrading until i got the 8500A.

The printer is big in size but it justifies that in robustness. It solid and fast.

The wireless works perfectly and now i can print from any laptop without cables (2 PCs and 1 Mac)

the Ethernet is a plus and used rarely when i have a lot of pages to print but so far i needed it only once.

I haven''t tried using the USB since wireless is to good.

The printer is fast photocopy machine and works in both color and BW.

It prints on two sides which is excellent if you mind saving papers, not to mention its low usage of the toners.

The web interface was a bit tricky to setup but after that, I tried printing from the office and it scared the maid in the house as the printer started printing and she got scared and turned it off.

I don''t use the fax option but its a plus option.

The printer has a touch control panel and can do most its configurations and functions without even using a pc or mac to control.

Positives:

* The Speed is the biggest plus in this printer and the double sided printing is an very welcome.

* Wireless printing rocks and helps you put the printer in a remote room in the house or a under the stairs without looking obtrusive on the office desk.

* It has six toners and I haven''t really measured the rate of printing per toner but will do that when i empty the first batch.

* touch control panel that saves you from using a pc

* works as an excellent photocopy and printer

* has a good storage compartment for like 100 pages.

* 6 toners so you don''t over use the same color to create new colors (2 are reserved for photos)

Negatives:

* The printer needs a sturdy desk as it shakes and rumbles when it prints and can knock down items that aren''t very stable unless you put it on a good platform.

* Its black and shows dust easily but all black objects do.

* its not the best photo printer but it does a decent job with the right paper

Read Best Reviews of HP Officejet Pro 8500A Wireless e-All-in-One (CM755A#B1H) Here

This wireless all-in-printer is probably the best printer I''ve owned, despite the fact that it arrived with a broken control panel. It prints very fast, the print quality is good, it has a lot of interesting and useful features, and it is not only wireless but you can install it wirelessly (not true for all wireless printers).

Setup involved eight steps which were pretty straightforward except for the fact that the printer heads were a little cumbersome to get in. However, the ink cartridges slid right in (simplest I''ve seen) so it will be a breeze to change ink cartridges. Installation went fairly smoothly. It took a little bit of time (about twenty minutes) but it is a wireless all-in-printer after all. In the past I''ve always had various problems when installing wireless all-in-printers (Canon Pixma MX860 all-in-one, HP Photosmart C6180 all-in-one, HP Officejet 7410). I''ve had to deal with faulty software, firewalls causing problems, or advertised features that were actually not present. That was not the case for this printer, except for the fact that the numerical keypad on the control panel did not work. This meant that I could not type in my encryption key. However, this printer features a WPS option, and my router had a WPS button (broadcasting the key), so I was able to complete the installation. I should add the LCD touch screen worked. It was just keypad.

I used HP 24/7 chat to contact technical support about the control panel. I was connected in 20 seconds and the tech support was efficient, free, courteous, and friendly. We just needed to verify that the panel was indeed broken. I have had good experience with HP customer and tech support before. Canon''s tech support is better than that of Adobe, AT & T, and of course, much better than Microsoft and Comcast. However, Canon''s tech support still lags behind that of HP (in my opinion). Anyway, HP is sent me another printer at no charge, and I am returning this one at no charge. In the mean time I have gotten good use of it. I should say it is the kids who are using the most.

I should add that you can, naturally, connect the printer via Ethernet cable, or USB cable. However, I just like to have everything on my wireless networks and install everything without using cables.

As mentioned by others, this all-in-one printer features a lot of functionality, first the all-in-one functionality, print, copy, fax, and scan. It features double sided printing, photo printing from USB flash drive, mobile device connectivity, limited printing from the web via the LCD touch screen, and a feature I found really interesting. You can copy both sides of an ID card (or a smaller document) onto one side of a paper.

As I mentioned I am impressed by the speed of the printer. It is rated 35 pages per minute for black and 34 pages per minute for color. I found that to be close to the truth even for a very high resolution picture. To test the speed of the printer I printed four very high resolution photographs on two printers at the same time on 8.5 X 11 inch paper (I have three printers on my home network, and let them race). The conclusion was that this printer is four times faster than the HP Photosmart C6180 all-in-one printer and twelve times faster than the Canon Pixma MX860 all-in-one printer.

The print color resolution is 4,800 X 1,200 which is good but not over the top (scan is 4,800 X 4,800). I don''t think you need more. However, I compared the prints with the other printers that I own. As far as I can tell the resolution is equally good between the printers (extremely high detail) but the colors and the contrast came out the best on the Hewlett Packard Officejet 8500A all-in-one wireless printer. Other than it being a little heavy and a little noisy I have no particular complaints about this printer.

Despite the fact that I really like this printer I feel I should give it four rather than five stars because, after all, the control panel was non-functional upon arrival.

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Pros: 1. Good print speed 2. Many features.

Cons: 1. EXPENSIVE INK 2. It "wigs out" & cleans itself 4 times in row, taking up TIME. It is constantly cleaning the print heads, which is probably why they go out so often 3. Canceling prints uses up 15 minutes between resets 4. Takes in paper crooked, so borderless prints are crooked 5. Prints lines in GOOD print quality images 6. Eats 2 sided prints and also extra blank paper, jamming the printer 7. Print heads go out OFTEN 8. Ink Hog.

Summary: Other people may have good experiences, but I told my husband that if I have to deal with this printer any more, I will empty a bottle of super glue into its machinery. After taking 3 hours to print 10 cards, I''m pretty irritated.

With the lines in the best quality prints, eating my 2 sided prints, print heads going out, expensive ink, then using the time it takes to figure out why its not printing and then the time it takes to cancel what is in "que", it is NOT worth it.

I used to love HP printers. My old LJ4 was workhorse that lasted decades. Unfortunately, the quality of their printers and the software installation problems has destroyed their previously good reputation.

I unpacked printer, removed packaging, put in printheads and toners and turned on. Kept getting Cartridge jam "remove packaging." But I verified there was NO MORE packaging inside. I finally called their "support" and wasted 30 minutes talking to someone who was absolutely no help and couldn''t even answer my basic questions whether some of the insides I saw were correct. He first told me it was probably power supply, which sounded ridiculous. Then I heard bad clunking on one of my numerous retries to print. He just said "probably defective." I had already performed the time-consuming software installation also with problems.

So now I have to package it all up and return TOTAL TIME WASTED= 3 hours

I give up on HP have had constant problems with every HP printer I''ve purchased after my old reliable LJ4.

Epson Artisan 50 Color Inkjet Printer (C11CA45201)

Epson Artisan 50 Color Inkjet Printer
  • Ultra Hi-Definition prints ¿ Claria 6-color ink for images with richness, depth and clarity, great for photos and everyday printing
  • Professional looking CDs/DVDs ¿ print right onto ink jet printable CDs/DVDs (software included)
  • Individual ink cartridges ¿ replace only the color you need
  • Better than lab quality photos ¿ photos are smudge, scratch, water and fade resistant
  • Fast print speeds ¿ maximum speed up to 38 ppm color, laser quality speeds of 5 ppm color, photos in as fast as 11 sec

We have purchase over 200 of these printers (even here at Amazon)

and they are pretty good until you run out of ink.

The Ink can print you about 2-3 months worth if used every

other day or so. But our customers, including ourselves,

have had nothing but head aches when it comes to changing

Ink Cartridges. 47 Customers have complained it will NOT

ACCEPT ''GENUINE'' Epson Cartridges. We owned 4 of them and

all 4 are currently wrapped up in their boxes ready to throw

out or send to a recycling center. All 4 printers

printed through 1 ink cycle then they started rejecting all

ink replacements. We bought ink here at Amazon rejected.

We tried the tech trick of pulling out the electrical cord,

and the USB cord, and it did accept 2 or 3 cartridges,

but eventually it started to reject all of them in time.

Keep in mind this printer has gotten fairy good reviews

the past year some individuals are being successful

with the printer but we suspect many reviews were

written before their 1st ink cycle went dry.

We noticed that (after installing the printers) The Epson

software started accessing the internet (or at least trying

to). This was to block any 3rd party Ink cartridges because

on one of the printers that WAS NOT on the internet it actually

acceptable 1 black ink 3rd party cartridge. The rest were

rejected even the "Genuine" Epson Cartridges.

Its difficult enough to have to purchase expensive

"Genuine" ink for these printers but to have them

rejected by your fairly new printer is appalling. We

have over 46 "genuine" ink cartridges that have been

returned to us (we no longer sell the ink). We used

some of the "rejected" ink on our Epson R260 models

and R280 model (those printers accepted the ink)

simply because the R260, R280 and this model -

"artisan" 50 use the same ink cartridge.

Customers have explained to us this printer model

has difficulty on accepting new cartridges no matter

where you purchased them. We have contacted

Epson by email, phone even writing them a letter,

but they yet to even try to return our messages.

Customers who have purchase this model, and have

not been subjected by the cartridge problem are very

fortunate and we are happy for them.

Overall, Epson has made this printer so INK

CARTRIDGE RESTRICTIVE that it has made us

impossible to recommend to anyone or even

give out for free.

While printing through its first ink cycle, it did

produce fine photos and fairly good text docs,

but after the ink was done it seems so was

the printer.

Update: We installed a CISS system on one

of the printers on Feb 1 2011: rejected.

On January 20th, the same model rejected

"Genuine ink" from a major store front. We

were fortunate to receive a refund on both

occasions. We aren''t trying anymore. Epson

keeps ignoring our calls.

Daniel J. Tyler (WJGroup)

Buy Epson Artisan 50 Color Inkjet Printer (C11CA45201) Now

This is a fantastic printer for the casual user, but can be problematic for critical uses.

This is the 6th Epson printer we''ve used. When printing out from Adobe Illustrator on all previous models, the size of the printout exactly matches the design.

When trying to print CD inserts on our new Artisan 50, booklets that are designed to be 119.5mm, end up being almost 125mm. May not sound like much, but once they''re cut, they don''t fit in the CD box. It''s very slow and tedious to modify all our layouts that are on file.

Previous models capable of printing on CD''s (such as the Stylus Photo R300) were dead on accurate.

The other annoying problem is that you can''t print from Illustrator directly to CD any longer. That was a great feature of the R300. In the Artisan 50, you have to use their amateurish CD print utility.

Read Best Reviews of Epson Artisan 50 Color Inkjet Printer (C11CA45201) Here

This is my first Epson printer. I''ve always owned HP but I was particularly interested in being able to print CD/DVD labels. I''ve owned this printer now for a couple of days and am totally pleased. The directions for getting started were easy, and I was able to begin use immediately. The quality of the labels are excellent, good color, looks professional and it prints quickly. I am not one to usually review products but this one, I found well worth the money, value, and am happy that I made the purchase. The only thing I''d change would be for the software that comes with the CD/DVD printer format, I wish it did more but I find it sufficient. I''d definitely recommend. Does well with documents as well.\\

Want Epson Artisan 50 Color Inkjet Printer (C11CA45201) Discount?

You have probably read a great deal of reviews about how wonderful the Epson Artisan 50 printer is. And as far as printing goes, especially on CDs, those reviews are spot on. Only one problem. I will wager the overwhelming majority of those 5 star reviews are coming from people who have yet to go through their first replacement cartridge cycle. Oh what a surprise they have in store for them. The SOB corporate scum at Epson engineered the printers to a) use only 60-70% of the ink in their OEM cartridges, b) retailed their own 6 OEM cartridges at prices ranging from a minimum of 350% to over 1200% of what non-OEM ink cartridge suppliers are charging (up to $35 a single cartridge) and c) have a chip-reset technology installed in the printers which will "fail to recognize" the vast majority of all non-OEM catridges and an estimated 33% of the GENUINE OEM cartridges. This is AFTER the company was sued in a 2006 case for doing the exact same thing and then went out and re-engineered the Artisan series of printers to be even WORSE!

I swear to gawd, you can''t make this crap up. As is well known, it only requires one cartridge requiring replacement in an Artisan model to disable the entire machine. Meaning that if you have a black print job to do and the yellow or light magenta cartridge is below it''s functional level (usually meaning 30-40% of the ink remains but can''t be used due to the technology they installed to rip people off), you can''t finish your black only print job. And NO...every one of the six colors is NOT required to print black like I have heard some wags out there stating falsely. Even if that were true, in an emergency where you needed to print a single black text page out, you couldn''t even print it in lighter gray to get by. If you buy the non-OEM cartridges you might...just MAYBE get one or two of them to work for 2 or 3 off and on cycles of the printer, but eventually they will require replacement when the orange print light starts blinking and the "non-compatible" error appears on your screen. This is apparently due to the ability of the software to stealth "report" information on the replacement cartridges through Epson''s online access portal and then order the printer to shut down if the information retrieved fails to jibe with an OEM chip code. Even if you buy the OEM cartridges (which I did) and get lucky through the first four or five recycles, once you hit the end cartridge (dark cyan) the party is over. I have yet to hear of an Epson Artisan 50 that made it through two OEM dark cyan replacements without a cartridge rejection. Mine never made it through one. And for the record...Epson claims the ink usage issue is due to their fear of your precious printer being "damaged" should the ink level fall too low. To which I and most others say "BULLS***". The technology doesn''t even read the ink levels...it "estimates" them...all to the manufacturer''s massively profitable cause of "erring on the side of caution". What a surprise.

The bottom line here is that the engineers at Epson set out to rip off every person that ever bought their printers by making them dysfunctional in the presence of all but OEM cartridges and then radically overpricing those OEM cartridges to wring massive profits out of hoodwinked consumers. And not only that, they installed this bug filled technology so that it goes haywire (an estimated) 33% of the time and rejects even their own overpriced replacements forcing the NEW AND UNUSED overpriced cartridge to be tossed and replaced with another NEW overpriced cartridge. The factual truth being that any buyer of these printers will likely have FAR more than the $120 cost of the printer invested in ink before the second cycle of cartridges is used up. Sort of like Exxon offering super cheap new cars to people that get 2 MPG and then raising the price of their gas to $500 a gallon knowing all along they engineered the super cheap new cars to self destruct if off brand gas is put in them. Doesn''t take long to see that the price or handling/styling/quality characteristics of the car never figured into the equation to begin with.

Get the printer if you want....it actually does print pretty good and you might even pick one up for nothing from a current owner who hasn''t yet dropped it out of a 12 story window or backed over it with a truck after the ink ran out. There is a wealth of technology out there you can buy to circumvent the corporate Epson thieves. Supposedly there is a $30 chip reset device that overrides the reject tech and Amazon sells CIS ink tank equipment ($35-$80) which, if carefully installed, provide an endless ink supply and eliminates the problem at the source. But my question is why support these corporate scumbags and use their stuff to begin with knowing that you actually will have to go out and spend another $100+/to defeat their thieving chip reset tech? REQUEST: Any updates on NEW class action lawsuits against Epson would be helpful in this review section as well. Maybe the second or third class action lawsuit against these SOBs will be the charm.

UPDATE 2/19/2012: I contacted Epson to see what they would do about the failure for the Artisan 50 to recognize the infamous cyan (dark) cartridge. I spoke with a service rep. She ran me through everything I had already tried then promised to immediately send out another cyan cartridge to see if that would solve the problem. She was, of course, lying her ass off and I soon found out why. They had checked the warranty on my printer after I had given her the serial number, realized it was going to run out in 7 days, and never sent the cartridge. Once I tired of waiting for it and contacted them again with the reference number for the call, they told me..."Oh, we''re so sorry...your warranty has run out and we can no longer help you". Epson aren''t just low-life scumbags...they are criminals in my opinion. They have floated these absolutely worthless printers out there for the public to buy for the sole purpose of selling them enormously over-priced ink cartridges with technology designed to cause failure. Anyone who''s had the misfortune to buy one of these printers should explore joining into a class action suit against the company.

The Artisan 50 printer worked fine for 14 months and I went through 3 ink changes. The printer utility notified me that I needed new color ink. I changed the 5 color ink cartridges with new Epson brand cartridges costing $75. The printer would not recognize the new cartridges and issued a warning to use only Epson brand. I called Epson and they said it is a hardware problem and since the printer is beyond the 1 year warranty they could only offer me a discount on a new printer. So, the printer is now e-waste recycled and I will never buy an Epson product again.

HP K5400TN Office Jet Pro Color Printer

HP K5400TN Office Jet Pro Color Printer
  • Prints at Breakthrough Speeds in Draft Mode Up to 36 Pages Per Minute In Black and 35 In Color
  • Produce Documents at Laser Quality Speeds of Up to 12 Pages Per Minute In Black and 10 In Color
  • User Friendly Control Panel Includes Graphical LED Icons and One Touch Backlit Buttons
  • Standard 250 Sheet and Optional 350 sheet Input Trays for High Volume Printing
  • 24.90 Lbs (WxLxH) 19.50" x 11.70" x 25.40"

I am very pleased with my new HP K5400TN Office pro color printer. It has proven to be the Ideal printer for a small home based business or for that matter for any small business needs. It prints very well and fast and with the double tray it can hold more than 500 sheets of paper. I replace the ink cartridges one at a time and don''t have to worry about the unit stopping in mid sentance as others have done. It also prints color very well, great colors. I love it.

Paul A. Charest

Buy HP K5400TN Office Jet Pro Color Printer Now

I am not completely satisfied with this printer. The paper seems to jam often in the intake mechanism and is then difficult to dislodge. It is also very LOUD.

On the positive side:

The print copy is clear and the printer (when working right) is fast.

I have been using HP printers for many years and was surprised that the quality of this model was not as good as my last four HP printers.