Yeah, anywhere.
 
FYI Dell has a laser for round $130 right now.
 
Our Dell Printing costs are less than 1cent a page FYI.  Not sure if
that is really good or not, I think it is.

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, January 30, 2008 9:26 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Printer brand recommendations




No you are able to get most cartridges now through Staples.   

 

From: Jonathan Link [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, January 30, 2008 10:24 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Printer brand recommendations

 


I'll concur with what Don Ely said, but that being the case, you have to
mitigate the downside.

High end inkjets are oxymoronic.

>From what you describe, in my opinion, you haven't sized your printers
appropriately to the job they are to perform.

Get the bigwigs a personal laser printer, they'll be happier with
improved availability, you'll have less support headaches.

I only ever install the driver for a printer, despite what comes with
it.  Depending on the end user, I'll leave it to them to install the
rest of the crap that comes with the printer.

 

IIRC Dell started making their cartridges proprietary and unavailable
anywhere but from Dell.  Is this still the case?

 

-Jonathan

On Jan 29, 2008 11:25 PM, Ben Scott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Howdy list,

 So, after some truly abysmal tech support experiences with HP this
month, I've decided it's time to look at other printer brands.  I've
been buying HP's almost exclusively for over a decade, so I'm starting
from scratch.  There are so many brands that even a product field
survey is non-trivial: Dell, Samsung, Canon, Epson, IBM/Lexmark,
Xerox, Ricoh, Sharp, Toshiba, Panasonic, just to name a few.
Recommendations?  Opinions?  Horror stories?

 Relatively small company, roughly 75 workstations.  Mostly
monochrome laser printers serving workgroups of 5-10 people.  Typical
volume might be 1K-3K pages/month.  A couple color laser printers
serving supersets of same.

 A few bigwigs have color inkjets in their office, because of course
they're too important to have to walk out to the printer in the hall,
but they also don't want to clutter up their fancy mahogany office
furniture with a larger laser printer that might actually work.  For
example, the Director of HR.  Since she works with personal/private
stuff, she wanted one of those print/scan/copy/fax jobs (reasonable, I
guess).  The supposedly high-end HP inkjet we bought has been a
disaster, which is why I'm here.

 Almost every printer we have is network-attached (easier to manage,
they roam with the user profile if hardware is changed, enables the
frequent requests to share printers).  As I recall from some
experience a few years ago, that seems to be a common failing with
many brands.  Even if they have a network jack, functionality/features
are severely reduced over the network.

 One thing I really dislike is printers which require special
software installation to the tune of hundreds of megabytes, a few
startup programs, a dozen desktop icons, and their own support,
update, and maintenance hassles.  Windows has APIs for printing and
scanning; if we stick to those, support and training are so much
easier.

 Thoughts?

-- Ben

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