IOW, each has to judge the importance of every operating aspect of a
tool such as an ink jet printer.
Quantifying perceived differences between printers, for example, will
predictably result in a frustration of vacillation and uncertainty. 
Eight hours? I'd hold the indoor record for "punchy".

Jack


--- Aaron Reynolds <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> 
> On Aug 17, 2006, at 7:13 PM, Jack Davis wrote:
> 
> > If I had the choice between two otherwise identical, equally priced
> > printers, I'd choose the one with the smallest droplet size.
> 
> Well, sure, as long as everything else actually is equal -- but 
> everything else are those hard to quantize in numbers things that 
> people never think about when shopping.  And how do you compare?
> 
> When buying the 7500, I spent eight hours in the showroom making
> prints 
> and drinking coffee.  The sales guys were wondering why I wanted to 
> print these funny images that for the most part lacked punchy, bright
> 
> colours and kept showing me samples with punchy bright colours.
> 
> The 7500 outclassed everything -- it was also the first time I had
> seen 
> something that I would accept as a "photographic print".  Of course,
> in 
> those good old days I was looking at eight thousand dollar printers.
> 
> -Aaron
> 
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