Lexmark To Exit Inkjet Printer Market 228
Barence writes "Lexmark has announced it will stop making inkjet printers and cut 1,700 jobs as part of a cost-cutting restructuring move. Lexmark will stop all inkjet development worldwide by 2013, and close its Philippines-based inkjet supplies manufacturing plant by 2015. This will provide annual savings of $85 million, rising to $95 million by 2015. The total restructuring cost before tax is expected to be $160 million. The company is also looking into the possible sale of its inkjet-related technology." I know there are some purposes for which inkjets are good (modern home photo printing can be insanely good, and we've featured a lot of cool projects which use inkjets to print sensors, solar cells, antennae, and more), but I get just a little queasy whenever I see an inkjet printer purchased by an innocent friend or family member who doesn't realize quite how much it will end up costing them in the long run.
executive speak demystified (Score:5, Insightful)
Executive: "restructuring cost before tax"
English: "way to create a paper loss to avoid tax".
Taxes, etc muddy waters regarding income (Score:3)
Executive: "restructuring cost before tax"
English: "way to create a paper loss to avoid tax".
No. It is common to cite financial performance before taxes and other things. Hence the common use of acronyms like EBITDA, earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization. These things muddy the water when trying to determine income, comparing one year to another, one company to another, etc.
Think of it like reporting your salary rather than the adjusted gross income (AGI) from your tax return.
Also, what makes you think there is a paper loss. Shutting down a plant does have costs. Tha
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Yes, it's common Executive Speak, which was the point.
I think that would be a great comparison if you were able to write off all your living expenses AND your consumer purchases from your tax returns the way businesses do. Everything from the food on your table to the TV in your den to the pontoon boat you use for fishing on the
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Yes, it's common Executive Speak, which was the point.
Actually the point of the original post was humor and to gain some karma.
If you thought the original post was serious then its point would have been to translate "executive speak" and it did so erroneously.
Re:executive speak demystified (Score:4, Insightful)
Long story short if you get a tax on your profits you should also get a tax break on your losses, otherwise say you made $100m one year and lose $100m the next year, the government would take a big profit tax while you in net haven't actually made any profit. This is actually true for people too, at least here in Norway. If I had a just terrible year, realized huge losses in the stock market so I should in theory get a tax refund but it exceeds my actual taxes then I don't get a check, I only get zero taxes and a deductible loss I can use next year.
The same is true for companies, which is often a problem for a company posting huge losses and going out of business. The government "owes" them a tax break but since companies disappear when they go bankrupt if you don't handle it right the government never has to honor it. There's nothing wrong with this, it's just making sure that the company going out of business gets the same tax breaks as a company managing to stay in business would have had. And no, you still don't make money by losing money...
Good (Score:4, Insightful)
Just wondering, has anyone else ever had a good experience with a Lexmark printer on a non-Windows machine?
Or had a Lexmark printer do, say, ten pages in a row without smudging or jamming?
Or is it just me?
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I dunno about the quality of prints, I've never used them and forgot they even existed...
Re:Good (Score:4, Insightful)
FTFY
Just wondering, has anyone else ever had a good experience with a Lexmark printer?
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Cheers,
Ian
I think the key word there was "laser" (Score:4, Insightful)
I have no experience with laser printers by Lexmark. My inkjet experience with them has been uniformly bad.
Re:I think the key word there was "laser" (Score:4, Interesting)
For their time, when your alternative was dot matrix or a third mortgage, inkjet printers were astonishing. That time has gone for a while now I think, time to dump the lot and concentrate on low-end colour lasers.
Cheers,
Ian
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My best experience with an inkjet is a Hewlett Packard. I bought an HP DeskJet+ in the summer of 1990 and it's still going strong 22 years later.
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You can still get ink for it?
Locally, I had one shop refuse to refill a cartridge for a 680C claiming it was "too old"
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I agree completely; I've never had a good experience with an inkjet, and I rely on laser printers now. They're dirt cheap when you get used business models on Ebay, and the cartridges are dirt cheap when you get the remanufactured kinds, and last for many thousands of pages for only about $25.
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The quality's okay (it works, but don't expect spectacular build quality) but Lexmark's firmware has been shaky for as long as I can remember.
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I should also point out that I repair printers, and would rather repair a Lexmark T6xx series over just about any other printer on the market. Pretty easy to work on, the parts are affordable & readily available, and they just last forever. I had one at an Office Depot copy center that had over 2 millio
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Of course, I was the contracted Lexmark service agent, so my good experiences were in being paid to work on them.
(To be fair, they were a decent workhorse. That said, they were all equipped with PostScript, so I didn't have to deal with driver issues.)
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About ten years ago, Lexmark was my favorite brand for cheap printers that just worked. Nowadays... not so much.
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I used to print very little, it could be several weeks between prints, and pretty much every time I tried to print with the Lexmark inkjet I had, I would have to mess around trying to get the dried up nozzles to work, before usually bowing to the inevitable and using a new cartridge. If I had left it with the feed open, the slightest amount of dust seemed to mess up the feed rollers, so that it would feed multiple sheets instead of one, and it was hard to clean that shit out. Of course I might have the same
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I've had the same ink clogging problems with Epson and Canon inkjet printers for the same reason. The problem there is not Lexmark. The problem is that inkjet technology is a fundamentally unreliable design except for moderately high-volume printing, and is way too expensive to use for high-volume printing.
They could solve the problem of course. They'd need a water or alcohol tank to flush the nozzles when the printer has been sitting there for more than a few hours, and a waste tank to hold the resulti
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I have heard they make reasonable Laser printers.
However their inkjets are cheap to buy very expensive to run and not that reliable, and do not as memory serves support Linux in any way, I think it is different with the laser printers.
On the positive side the extinction of Lexmark inkjet's is coming non too soon. It may improve the situation with Dell Printers which I believe were rebadged Lexmarks.
It should be one less barrier to the adoption of Linux, for the average joe. A dual boot option is much more
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However their inkjets are cheap to buy very expensive to run
Can't say anything about the rest because I haven't printed anything in years, but Lexmarks and, I think, HPs (I might be wrong on the second brand, but I'm sure there was at least another one) were among the very few brands that had the heads built in the cartridges. This increased the prices of the cartridges and made them awfully expensive to run... if you didn't recharge the cartridges yourself. If you did, they had the significant advantage that a blockage resulting from dried-up low-quality ink inside
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As an American, I would bet money that he's an American, and English is his first and only language. That's a very common problem among American English speakers. Pretty soon, it'll probably be deemed "correct" here to use 's to indicate plural, since if enough people using a language do things a certain way, that becomes the standard.
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I had an IBM/Lexmark 4019 laser printer for 10 years. A solid workhorse that produced tens of thousands of pages without any problems. Worked well with Windows, OS/2 and Linux.
Finally replaced with a cheap multifunction device as my printing requirements dropped and I needed scanner/fax more and occasionally color print.
I miss the 4019 though, it was spectacular. Do modern printers even have Postscript anymore?
Excellent support! (Score:3, Funny)
Finally, after years of complaints and consumer demand, Lexmark bows to the will of the customer and does what everyone so desperately wanted, leave.
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Finally, after years of complaints and consumer demand, Lexmark bows to the will of the customer and does what everyone so desperately wanted, leave.
Yep. When Lexmark was part of IBM, their printers were allegedly pretty decent, but I already had a printer, so I never got a Lexmark.
By the time I went shopping again, though, Lexmark had done their slimy DMCA thing. I swore I'd never buy a printer from a company that did that.
There might not be all that many players in the printer market, but there's enough that I could use the Invisible Hand and give them the Finger.
So I did.
Re:Excellent support! (Score:5, Informative)
Came to say this. For those that don't know the DMCA reference, Lexmark filed lawsuits under the DMCA to prevent ink refill manufacturers from putting out products for their printers. They argued since the code in their printer/carts was copyrighted, the act of circumventing it by putting more ink in was illegal.
Yeah, they made a lot of friends with that one.
Good riddance.
Inkjet ink costs; dot-matrix ribbons unavailable (Score:2)
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If you don't need color, a laser is DEFINITELY the way to go, even for home. I bought one for $70 five years ago (Brother HL-2040). My parents have gone through two inkjet printers in that time and a cartridge or two, and they probably only print a few times a year. A laser printer is going to be a lot more durable than an ink jet, and the toner is so much cheaper. Replace the cartridges twice over the entire life of the printer and you probably would have saved money buying a laser printer...unless you jus
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I've got a HL-4070CDW I got around the same time and I wholeheartedly second this endorsement. Brother just makes solid, no-bullshit printers. I stuck it on my network and haven't had to mess with it since. The toner cartridges are about $50 each, and each color is independently replaceable, as is the drum unit. I think I've replaced them two or maybe three times. The drivers (assuming the OS doesn't have one already—it speaks PostScript and PCL) are 3MB, and there's versions that go all the way back
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Laser printing is a lot cheaper than it used to be - even colour is cost effective at home. They probably aren't much good for photos - that's where the multiple shades of inks in higher end inkjets come into their own - but otherwise they're a reasonable home option now.
For photos, getting them printed online is cheaper and almost always better than using an inkjet anyway, unless you want to mess about with colour calibration or experiment with textured papers.
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Since half of my color printing at home is photos, color lasers are not cost effective at home, for me.
And I suspect many of us.
I will probably get a B&W laser soon, reteach the wife how to choose her printer, and put up with the 'PRINTRR"S NOT WORKING' screams, but it is no worse than now. After severl HPs and one Epson, I ahve a Canon MP620 that is not cheap to run, but is reliable and never fades or sputters ink. It's just a major PITA to get networked.
And I won't be buying an office style laser -
Now if we could get other inkjet manufacturers... (Score:4, Funny)
...to follow suit, and wean consumers off the "cheap inkjet printer" crack pipe. I have a full-color (4 cartridge) laser printer that I virtually never need to change the toner on, and when I do it's invariably the black cartridge. My significant other, meanwhile, goes through inkjet cartridges like I go through socks. And I *love* socks.
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What model, been looking to replace our inkjet.
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And I *love* socks.
Please tell us more.
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I have a full-color (4 cartridge) laser printer that I virtually never need to change the toner on, and when I do it's invariably the black cartridge.
I have an HP Color LaserJet 2600n and it's been brilliant. Except that after not using it for a couple of months, all three color toner cartridges mysteriously ran dry at the exact same time and had to be replaced before I could print a greyscale document. I was glad to find half-price 3rd party refills online; I just hope they don't turn out to suck.
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If you do a lot of high-volume printing, then I guess laser printers make sense. But some of us print only a few pages a month on average. The higher cost of lasers just doesn't make sense for us.
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That's why a used Laser is a good idea. Ever check the prices on the old HP LaserJet 4series? They're still in demand because they're tanks.
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It's as big as a tank too. OK, if you only need black and white printing, you need a high-volume printer, and you have the room for it, I'm sure it makes sense to spend $85 for a used LJ4.
But none of those applies to me. I have a tiny inkjet that lives on a shelf above my desk, prints color, and only cost me $35 brand new. It does the occasional letter, printed form, and photograph quite well, and that's all I need it to do. I buy maybe one cartridge a year, so cartridge costs are not an issue.
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I have one like that! So annoying when the secretary goes on holiday and I have to change the toner myself... ;)
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Same can be said for inkjet printers though, and in my experience they're a LOT more fragile. Christ, I've _dropped_ my Brother HL-2040 and it's still going just fine. My parents have an HP inkjet that hasn't been moved from under the desk since they bought it a couple years ago and it's already falling apart. Won't feed pages half the time, no longer prints color even with a fresh cartridge, the carriage jams...
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You have to look at the level of the printer before saying it applies to ALL printers. HP has cheap "disposable" printers in the $120 and under range, and they are complete and total crap, but they also have some fairly decent mid-range units that are MUCH better. The old saying about getting what you pay for DOES apply in many situations. There is also the difference in speed for your money as well, where the lower cost laser printers are SLOW compared to ink jet. I agree that ink jet is better f
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Forgot to mention the prices...my Brother HL-2040 was $70, my parents HP was probably around $50 or so, maybe a bit more. Point being that, at nearly the same price point, you can get a laser that can handle some abuse and is built to last, or you can get an inkjet that will slowly tear itself apart even without any abuse. Maybe I'm generalizing too much here, but hell, change your black ink once or twice and your cheap inkjet has probably become more expensive than a cheap laser.
Of course, the inkjet does
Amen (Score:2)
No more will I have to hear, "Can you help me get this Lexmark printer working?", "Yep, here's the box I'll help you pack it back up."
They have finally run out of Unicorn blood (Score:2, Funny)
Unicorn have now been declared endangered, cutting of the supply of Unicorn blood for the ink cartridges.
Refill Your Own (Score:5, Informative)
Refilling your own cartridges is super easy if you pick the right printer.
Brother printers particularly are good, the cartridges (at least all the ones I've seen) are just ink receptacles, they have no electronics, just put more ink in job done.
Ink can be purchased on ebay etc in 100ml bottles or more, for a fraction of the cost of buying cartridges.
Even better, it's pretty easy to find good inkjets for a buck or two second hand, I've bought lots of them, most with empty cartridges, often complete with power and USB. Refill the carts, run a few cleaning cycles, and they work really well.
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Frankly I've never had any luck refilling ink cartridges. In theory it's a good idea; in practice those ink refills gum up the print heads in no time flat.
The best decision I ever made was to replace my inkjet with a monochrome laser printer. What I lost in color I more than gained in reliability.
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Brother carts are /slightly/ more complex than that. The ones I've seen have a gear on it that gets moved slightly every time you print, and when it reaches a certain position the printer knows the cart's about out of toner.
IIRC with a proper refill kit you get toner plus a new gear or some way to reset it without breaking it.
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Brother printers particularly are good, the cartridges (at least all the ones I've seen) are just ink receptacles, they have no electronics, just put more ink in job done.
I've had good experiences with Canon (or at least with the model of Canon I've got, an i560x). The ink cartridges are just ink tanks (with a bit of sponge to control the ink flow); the level detection is done with a little prism built into the wall of the cartridge, and I believe that it depends on measuring how much light is absorbed by the ink due to evanescent waves, or perhaps due to the difference in refractive index between air and ink. Clever use of physics, cheap solution, and the ink is readily ava
Lexmark is still around? (Score:5, Insightful)
In Mid-2004 their stock was around $90. Now it hovers around $22.
It warms my heart to see the scum of the printer industry slowly die. Whenever I was asked about which printer to get, my answer was almost always, "Anything but Lexmark."
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Not sure that means much. Most company's stock value has taken a battering in the last five years.
WTF (Score:3)
So what are they going to do if they stop making inkjet printers? I can't recall any other product that Lexmark made.
Anyway who is going to pay for the disposal of all those useless printers that you won't be able to get ink for now?
(Of course most people just threw them in the garbage when the cartridge ran out anyway - it was cheaper to buy a new printer.
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They do this:
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Inkjets dont have to be so expensive... (Score:4, Insightful)
Inkjet printers have a lot of advantages. They do a much nicer job on color than laser printers do. They're smaller, lighter, and use a lot less power. Moreover, the power they use while they are sleeping (which is most of the time for home printers) is a lot less than a laser printer. The only thing that makes them expensive are the cartridges which cost $15 to $40 a pop and don't last nearly as long as a laser toner pack. That's a shame because one of the inkjet makers (Lexmark, Canon, HP, Epson) could/should have stepped forward and started selling a refillable ink cartridge which would have had a simple refill valve or cap or something on top where you could take the $6 a quart ink and squirt it in to top it off. One quart would last for about 150 refills. That would make inkjet printers cheaper by far than laser printers. Why don't inkjet makers do that? The answer is that they could never get past the razor/razor blade idea where they make all of their money from the ink cartridges and the printer is just the 'razor' that people buy so that they will be locked in as a customer of the ink cartridge 'razorblades.' In this case, though, that way of thinking like an MBA is killing a very nice technology.
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Refillable cartridges just as you describe are readily available aftermarket items for many printers, just search Ebay
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I seem to recall hearing that most inkjet companies sell the printers themselves at a loss -- the ink is so expensive because that's where they're actually making money. If they started charging more realistic prices for these things, the ink would be cheaper, but the printers would be comparable in price to lasers -- and I suspect many people would choose to go with a laser printer in that case. I mean the biggest complaint I hear about refilling inkjet cartridges is that it's an extremely messy process. W
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the ink is so expensive because that's where they're actually making money.
It's not just expensive, printer ink is more expensive than human blood [consumerist.com].
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the ink is so expensive because that's where they're actually making money.
It's not just expensive, printer ink is more expensive than human blood [consumerist.com].
With almost 7 billion factories making the stuff, I'm not surprised blood is cheaper than ink.
https://www.google.com/publicdata/explore?ds=d5bncppjof8f9_&met_y=sp_pop_totl&tdim=true&dl=en&hl=en&q=world+population
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Ink jet technology isn't dying its just the end of the worst inkjets ever.
There are decent Inkjet printers around although pretty much all have the ink tax, It might not be too long before critical patents will expire allowing more companies to enter the market and supply the Ink-jets we want to buy.
Personally my printing needs are met by a mono laser and a multifunction hp psc2175 inkjet both networked to an iomega Iconnect Nas running debian (the Iconnect is superb value once you have debian installed it
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You should say "than most laser printers do". Many minilabs (photo) use lasers to print on photo paper. The Fuji Frontier minilab being a good example.
Let the giclee (inkjet ) vs laser religious war begin.
YippeeiYaa!!!! (Score:2)
Lexmark has long been the one of the leading banes of the inkjet printer business. Leading the charge with DRM built into inkjet cartridges that required you to buy /their/ ink. They were on of the worst vendors for lock in and lawsuits, getting lawyer happy and suing people who dared to try to bypass their DRM lock in.
They are an evil company and I have had great pleasure over the years steering many, many an IT purchase /away/ from Lexmark and towards other vendors that did not play their games. I would h
Inkjet printers fit my use case very well. (Score:3)
And Nothing of Value Was Lost... (Score:2)
Funny Lexmark story (Score:2)
First, I've never had one good experience with Lexmark inkjets. Bad drivers, expensive ink, shoddy engineering...
About that latter two: I was once doing a presentation on Apple products at a major educational customer. The Lexmark rep was on before me. In response to questions about the cost of ink cartridges, he recommended to the school district they simply buy many, many, new printers and discard them as the cartridges emptied. Seems a set of cartridges cost more than a new printer, and the printers were
Just Don't Buy A Printer (Score:4, Interesting)
Lexmark does something that benefits consumers! (Score:2)
WTG Lexmark!
People still think injet costs a lot? (Score:2)
Wow. My whole extended family uses Brother inkjets, and we buy the LC-61 ink carts for those for under $1 a cartridge, and even with 4 of them each being used by a lot of kids printing like crazy...we spend maybe $30 on ink for all four for a year. Its dirt cheap.
I mucked around with color lasers for a while, but while you could get them cheap with starter toner carts, the regular replacements cost more than I paid for four printers and a couple of years worth of ink!
coders vs the real world (Score:3)
Sometimes we need a reminder that all computer users are not programmers. Many are in business, some are in education, many are home users while others (me) do graphic arts... These people frequently need color and often they need quality color. A simple black only laser printer is not an answer. A color laser prints ugly pages that stick and peel and fade and reflect light unevenly.
If printers were designed with only programmers in mind, there would be a large outcry from the real world. It's nice to know what meets your personal needs, or doesn't; but that is of little interest to Lexmark or other manufacturers who cater to a larger audience.
Re:Not so bad (Score:4, Insightful)
Except that if you only print occasionally the ink heads clog or dry up, requiring a ink-wasting cleaning cycle or replacement... A cheap laser, even a cheap color laser, is so much better a choice for anything but photo printing. Decent color lasers can be had for $200 on sale sometimes. Really decent ones for $300.
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My inkjet printer is still using the starter cartridges that came with it in 2008 ($30 + free S&H for a networked printer made it too good to pass up). It's just starting to get low on B&W now. There were times I'd go more than 8 months without printing anything and never had a problem. However, once the ink runs out, I'll likely spend the money to get a nice networked color laser printer.
Re:Not so bad (Score:5, Insightful)
Laser isn't as expensive as it used to be.
For around $100 you can have a BW HP laser.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16828115639 [newegg.com]
The quality and reliablity make it woth the extra money, even if you never recoup the $60 price difference between that and this:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16828102471 [newegg.com]
Color laser is closer to $ 170. But most casual printers don't really need color, they just need a readable printout.
Re:Not so bad (Score:5, Insightful)
The quality and reliablity make it woth the extra money
That's my fear, lexmark will find a way to value engineer lasers to eliminate laser-style quality and reliability.
Imagine if McDonalds broke into the sushi market, dumped into the market to put all independent sushi shops out of business, them dropped quality to the level of rotten canned cat food to generate a modest financial gain, then got out of the sushi market because no one wants to buy rotten canned cat food anymore.
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You haven't seen Lexmark's drivers or firmware lately. They've already made a damn good start.
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I don't know about HP quality vs Brother, but I just stopped by my local Staples both times I needed a new laser printer.
The last time the Brother was $80 and also had label maker thrown in.
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Yea, I was going to say -- I can't see COLOR laser printers being economical for average home use any time soon, but I bought a Brother HL-2040 black and white laser for $70 five years ago, and it's still working great. I love the thing. Never had a problem with it, even on Linux. Paid for itself more times than I can count too.
Of course, the problem with laser printers that cheap, is usually when anything more significant than a toner cartridge needs replaced, it's cheaper to just get a new printer. I foun
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Yeah. Never had any problems with the Brother under Linux either.
The other huge advantage besides cost-per-page for the Brother laser is that it is a really reliable tray fed.
Drop in a fresh ream of paper, and you shouldn't get any jams.
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Yep. My 4M+ is still going strong, 90k+ page count. And I have a 5M at home, even with the extra paper tray add-on (so it holds a ream and a half) was a steal from university surplus at $50 - have been using it for like 6 years now...
Re:Not so bad (Score:4, Informative)
I hope you haven't kept it plugged in these last 6 years. I had one of those and it idled at about 400 watts. You could feel the heat radiating on the outside of the HUGE plastic case. We kept it for a few years and would only power it on when we needed it, but then decided it was just easier to get a newer machine (a Lexmark coincidentally) that idles at about 30watts. Yes the old HP 4 and 5 series were built like tanks, and the parts are still cheap at places like precisionroller.com, but they are not economical to keep plugged in 24/7.
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Sure the replacement cartridges cost more.
Ink jets are not dependable. (Score:4, Insightful)
Inkjet prices aren't so bad for those home users that only need to print occasionally. .
Occasional printing is precisely what Ink jets are the worst at. Those things clog up and when they do manage to print it's only after a good phlem clearing dump of a lot of ink into the waste bin. It's the laser printers that work well on occasional printing, even with the warm up they need they still are faster than an ink jet, and they don't have unpredictable quality problems when they haven't been used in a while. Dependable when you suddenly need it.
I just bought a new multi-function duplex-printing laser printer from cannon for 77$ including shipping on amazon.com. Even the 500 sheet "starter" toner cartridge will last longer than a full ink jet will, and 3rd party replacement toner cartriges (2000 sheets) will be under $15.
given that's the price now for laser printing for a quality company, Why would anyone buy an inkjet?
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I just bought a Brother all-in-one inkjet for $50, and some third-party ink carts (2 black and a set of color) for $7, after finally giving up on a Laserjet 5 that I'd been flogging for years and years. The Brother machine even has a document feeder that actually works, which makes scanning documents more joyous, and it's WiFi, which makes it trivial to move around.
To work around the clogged print-head issue, I've set up the following: Every Sunday at noon, the printer prints something -- automatically.
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> given that's the price now for laser printing for a quality company, Why would anyone buy an inkjet?
Anyone needing color maybe ? Supplies for small color laser printers are actually more expensive than those for inkjets.
Ummm... no they are not. I own a color laser jet and an inkjet, so I know. the cost of cartridges is about 13$ for each color on both.
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except you can get a cheap hp bw Laser for under $100 most times with the benefit that toner never dries out and forcing replacement of the cartridge
My first laser was a Samsung bought on sale for $100 about a decade ago and it still works. Toner runs about $50 a cartridge and the really nice thing is, we've only bought 3 cartridges in the last decade. For the ocasisional printing needs, it's been a god send after using inkjets that had cartridge costs of $30+ for each (two needed).
I will agree that inkjets
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Sounds like you're just not using the right kind of paper for a large image. Switch to paper made for printing large images with inkjet and you'll see a world of difference.
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Sounds like you're just not using the right kind of paper for a large image. Switch to paper made for printing large images with inkjet and you'll see a world of difference.
Although you can get by with other stuff, Inkjet paper was supposed to have a clay coating that keep the liquid from soaking the fibers. Although I've been printing laser for so long that I don't really know anymore.
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At which point it becomes prohibitively expensive to own and operate an inkjet.
I mean, for photos, between Costco and Walmart (and who use real photo paper), it's pretty damn cheap to have extremely high quality prints made - better than an inkjet and probably an order of magnitude cheaper if you went with the special inkjet paper.
For bl
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Hire a management consultant, and pay him in proportion to the cost-cuts he makes. He'll give you a brilliant explanation why cutting everything makes perfect sense. (You might not understand every detail, but you'll trust him, because somebody who charges that much has got to be smart.)
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Did you forget that they make tons of office laser printers? They'll save on costs by getting rid of their cheap, shitty, consumer inkjets that apparently are no longer profitable. Good riddance to them. Lots of companies (including IBM) have given up on or sold off their consumer product divisions, to concentrate solely on business customers, who are willing to pay a lot more money for products and demand better quality.
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I'm a former office-supply store sales guy who dealt with these machines and all the pros and cons of HPs, Epsons, and Lexmarks and Lexmark is the most economical. They have a couple of models that print about a penny-a-page for the ink. That's a significant savings, even when compared to laserjet printers. Most mid-to-high end laserjets print for 1.5 to 2 cents per page. Lexmark's inkjets print for less money than that.
In my experience, with one Lexmark printer if you did not print for a couple of weeks the cartridge clogged and could not be unclogged. Sure, there was a cleaning cycle, it just did not work. A cartridge that does not print cleanly is useless, so unless I remembered to print regularly and did not go on vacation, after a liitle bit of use the cartridges had to be thrown out. A theoretical 2 cents a page becomes 20 cents a page, or even $2 a page if you did not print much before the clog set in (this happened
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Really? I have a Brother HL-2040 laser printer, low-end (cheapest one I could find), and last I calculated I believe it was under half a cent per page for toner. And based on what others have been commenting here I was kind of starting to think I was paying WAY too much for that toner...
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Presumably, they're going to continue with their laser printer business. They make a lot of big office laser printers, and from what I hear they're quite nice actually, totally unlike their consumer inkjets.
So to user your analogies, it's like Ford stopping production of their Fiesta cars, or Microsoft discontinuing their "Home" versions of Windows. Both of these moves would be welcome too.