Yah, I had one of those Xerox Daiseywheel printers once. I remember sending out a resume printed with it on good paper and getting a 50% response from it. No job, but people actually wrote back to tell me they didn't have a job. That typeset quality printing sure made it past the secretaries which is the hardest hurdle to get by.

Hummm...? Maybe people recognize quality better than we usually tend to think.

graywolf
http://www.graywolfphoto.com
"Idiot Proof" <==> "Expert Proof"
-----------------------------------


David Mann wrote:
On Jan 18, 2005, at 4:52 AM, Collin Brendemuehl wrote:

Remember NLQ? Near Letter Quality


Sure do. I even remember real typewriters, and being privileged enough in typing class to get to use the electronic typewriters (with daisy-wheels) twice in a single year!.

I even remember when we were allowed to start writing in pen instead of pencil (I think I was about 10). I think our writing had to be of a certain neatness. Of course, I still prefer to use a pencil.

When 24-pin dot matrix printers make nice results for a cheaper and quieter price than a Qume Sprint 3/5, NEC SpinWriter, or Xerox. Not quite as good, but close enough for the material's recipient -- for the customer.


The one thing I miss about dot matrix is the fan-fold paper. It's just brilliant for printing out a whole file of program code without having it broken up into pages. Oh and laser-printed ASCII art just has no soul :)

The high quality & expensive B&W digital ink prints I've looked at fit the same definition. From normal viewing distance they look fine. Nice smooth tones. No banding. Really, really nice. (Albeit from $2000+ Epsons.)


Now for the point I was actually replying to :)

Regarding banding, it does pay to keep an eye on it. I had banding appear in a test print the other day. Of course, it didn't help that I hadn't run the head alignment routine since I had bought the printer... after I went through that my subsequent prints were stunning.

Caveat: This information should be viewed critically. It may merit as much technical excellence as a CBS news report.


The TV news around here is getting worse... they're down to speak ing in sin gle syl lab les now. The only part of the news I watch these days is the weather girl.

Cheers,

- Dave

http://www.digistar.com/~dmann/





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