I also gave up on HP long ago. Among other problems, buying cartridges
was painful. I thought an Epson I got was a step in the right direction,
but as others have said, it became fussy after a year or so, and would
spend a few minutes cleaning before it would do anything.
I've had a Canon Pixma
Thanks! A few others have also recommended HP. Have you had yours long?
I ask, because the Epson works fine at first, but as it rounds the corner of
its first year, the problems begin.
Cheers,
Terry
On 5/14/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hiya! I got mine free when I
Thanks! A few others have also recommended HP. Have you had yours long?
I ask, because the Epson works fine at first, but as it rounds the corner of
its first year, the problems begin.
HP made good printers, long, long ago, once upon a time, but are no
longer anything special. The last HP I
I still have two HP 4ML printers. One for me and one for my daughter.
They were originally almost $1k. Slow as molasses by today's
standard, but excellent text print and very reliable.
It is getting difficult to get good rebuilt cartridges, and the new
ones, if you can find them, cost a
My Konica works the same way.
I noticed looking at Xerox's web site that their lowlevel Color laser
looks suspiciously like a Konica Minolta color laser printer.
Stewart
At 06:18 PM 5/15/2007, you wrote:
I have a cheap Dell color laser with the cartridges in a carousel, but I
don't think
Many thanks to everyone who responded to my question.
I use color for craft projects (example, color coded knitting patterns;
printing artwork for miniatures). The Stylus is a printer/scanner/copier,
in ad. However, in addition to the waste of the very costly ink and the
messy output. It
I saw on Cnet last night two printers that have a low cost per copy
print (color)
One was a Kodak and the other was a Canon Proxima.
Straight printers not multi function.
Stewart
At 12:50 PM 5/14/2007, you wrote:
Many thanks to everyone who responded to my question.
I use color for craft