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Printers Shopping Tips : |
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- Base your printer choice on the kind of output you
plan to print. Text, graphics, and photos each place different demands
on a printer. In general, laser printers offer the best text quality,
and ink jet printers offer the best photo and graphics quality.
- If you don't need to print color, a monochrome
laser printer may be a good choice. It is faster than a color ink jet
and provides higher-quality output for text and line graphics.
- Judge a printer's speed not only by the
manufacturer's claims but also by the speed at the quality level you
will use. Ink jet speed claims usually refer to the printer's fastest
mode rather than the higher-quality modes you're more likely to use.
- Check the connections. If you have an old computer
or operating system that doesn't support USB, make sure the printer
has a parallel port.
- The preferred choice for shared printers is to
connect them directly to your network. Make sure the printer offers
both the right network connection and software that will work with
your network.
- Not all printers allow memory upgrades. Some need
little or no memory, because they use your computer to process a print
job. Others come with all the memory necessary. If a printer allows
memory upgrades, make sure it has enough memory for the kind of work
you'll be doing. For example, a printer may need a memory upgrade to
print a full page at the highest resolution.
- The less often you have to add or change
consumables, the better. If you print an average of 25 pages a day,
and your printer holds only 25 sheets, you'll have to load paper every
day. If your printer holds 250 sheets, you'll need to load paper about
once every two weeks. Choose a printer that can hold enough paper and
enough ink or toner that you won't have to add or change them too
often.
- If the number of pages you print is large enough to
be a concern, a good rule of thumb is to pick a printer with a monthly
duty cycle that's about four times the number of pages you expect to
print each month.
- Before buying a printer, check out the
manufacturer's Web site to make sure it provides driver updates and
tech-support information.
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When
comparing printers, consider the total cost of ownership, not just the
purchase price. Depending on how many pages you print, a cost
difference of just a penny per page can save hundreds or even
thousands of dollars over the printer's lifetime.
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