Showing posts with label Wireless printer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wireless printer. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

HP Wireless DeskJet 450wbt printer reviews


The good: Excellent photo print quality; includes Bluetooth card; portable; includes rechargeable battery.

The bad: Fairly expensive; mediocre text-print quality; slow print speeds.

The bottom line: The HP Deskjet 450wbt offers full-size prints, excellent photo quality, portability, and wireless Bluetooth and IR printing, making it a good buy for businesspeople on the road a lot.

Specs: Printer Type: Personal printer - Ink-jet - Color; Max media size: Legal (8.5 in x 14 in), A4 (8.25 in x 11.7 in); Connectivity technology: Wired, Wireless


Reviewed by: Kristina Blachere
Reviewed on: 02/26/2004 Released on: 10/01/2003 If you're constantly on the go for business, then you'll need a printer to take with you. With the HP Deskjet 450wbt, HP has repackaged its popular Deskjet 450cbi to include the often hard-to-obtain Bluetooth card so that you can print from wireless Bluetooth devices. In addition to wireless Bluetooth capabilities, the 450wbt comes equipped with infrared capabilities so that you can print from your PDA, plus a battery and a parallel print cable. However, this four-ink inkjet printer lacks robust print speeds, decent text-print quality, and the ability to print without an attached computer--features you will find included with the similar Canon i80. But if cost is no option and you want the hands-down best customer-service warranty in the business, the HP Deskjet 450wbt makes sense for you. Measuring a slim 13.3 inches by 3.2 inches by 6.5 inches (W, H, D), the HP Deskjet 450wbt, like the Canon i80, is a very compact printer designed to print full-size 8.5x11 documents. The input tray snaps into the body, and the output guide retracts so that the printer will fit snugly into your briefcase or luggage. Even with the battery installed, the 450wbt weighs only 4.6 pounds.

The 450wbt supports both parallel and USB connections through ports located along the back. Oddly, HP includes a parallel cable in the box, but you'll have to buy the more popular USB cable yourself. The 450wbt comes with a preinstalled Bluetooth wireless card, but if you remove the Bluetooth card, the open slot in back supports CompactFlash cards (Types I and II), provided the images are stored in Digital Print Order format (DPOF is a digital standard created in 2000 by Canon, Eastman Kodak, and Matsushita Electric). An infrared port located on the printer's front panel makes it easy to beam your PDA-created document (Palm OS or Pocket PC) directly to the printer.

If you travel a lot, you'll want the optional carrying case ($59-$99) and the AC car adapter ($77). Both are available from HP's Web site. It is standard to offer these options separately. The HP Deskjet 450wbt's best features are its included battery and various wireless capabilities, both of which cost extra on the Canon i80. Beyond the battery and the wireless features, the HP Deskjet 450wbt continues printing with only one of its two ink cartridges still working, and HP provides a plastic ink-cartridge case to avoid spillage while traveling. Another sweet touch is a small plastic sleeve hidden on the bottom of the printer to hold your business card. Think of it as the working person's equivalent of having name tags sewn into clothing.

The Deskjet 450wbt's included software is rudimentary: HP Photo Printing Software allows you to create and print photo-album pages; BT Print sets up Bluetooth printing; HP Mobile Printing for Pocket PCs sets up infrared printing; and you get online access to MyPrintMileage, a Web-based program that keeps track of how much ink you use and suggests when to order new cartridges. The print driver software covers only the basics, such as paper type, print quality, brightness and saturation, and various maintenance tasks, including print-head cleaning and color calibration. The interface is simple and easy to use. While the HP Deskjet 450wbt created excellent color prints in CNET Labs' tests, the Canon i80 performed significantly faster and delivered slightly better print quality overall. The 450wbt text print speeds averaged a slow 1.48 pages per minute (ppm), which compared poorly to the i80's zippy 5.6ppm. With color photos, the 450wbt took 4.07 minutes to print our 8.5x11 test photo, whereas the i80 took a mere 2.8 minutes per page, or about half the time.

The 450wbt's text printing, even on coated inkjet paper, was a disappointment. Our CNET Labs' test document looked oversaturated, with blurry letters. Because this printer is a Deskjet, designed for businesspeople on the go, rather than part of HP's Photosmart line, the 450wbt really should print crisper text. Color graphics, while better, showed visible banding and dithering, and the colors in our test document looked faded.

The Deskjet 450wbt's strong suit is printing photos. It did an excellent job with our tricky, high-resolution, 8.5x11 test photo, producing smooth and natural-looking skin tones, vibrant colors, and no visible dithering (meaning you couldn't see any of the ink dots). We did, however, notice some faint banding in the backgrounds.

In CNET Labs' tests, the 450wbt's ink costs were average. It printed 55 copies of our 8.5x11 test photo before running out of ink, which works out to $1 per page. If you print mostly 4x6 photos, your costs will run about half that, around 50 cents per print.

Saturday, August 9, 2008

Canon Pixma iP90v Wireless Mobile Printer


The good: Text quality has improved over the last version; very compact design makes it easy to carry with you; ink-saving modes can save you in a pinch; PictBridge- and IrDA-enabled.

The bad: The printer is expensive, and add-ons such as battery packs make it moreso; photo print speed is slower than that of the older model.

The bottom line: The Canon Pixma iP90v is the Vista-enabled version of the older Pixma iP90 and offers nearly the same print speeds and quality. It's a very useful printer if you travel a lot and need to print often, but consider the purchase carefully because it's quite expensive.


Specs: Printer Type: Photo printer - Ink-jet - Color; Max media size: Legal (8.5 in x 14 in); Connectivity technology: Wired, Wireless

Wireless printer review: Lexmark 1400


Posted by Becky McCray at 11:28 AM
The Product: Lexmark 1400 series wireless printer

Short and Sweet Review: It works, without wires!

Who should use it: Small businesses with existing wireless networks.

Mike Phan with Rocket XL sent it to me for a review. I set it up in my home office, where I have a simple wireless network. Setup was as easy as any other recent printer I've purchased.

A few points caught my attention.

Single use ink cartridges
The ink cartridges are licensed for one use only. This is marked on the cartridge, as well as mentioned in the installation process. Good news: they include pre-paid return mailers.

Power cord
The power cord is a bit unusual. There is one cord from the wall to the little transformer box, then instead of another cord from there to the printer, the transformer plugs into the back of the printer.

Auto Alignment
I've had printers before that auto align, but my last several HP All-in-One's didn't. I forgot that I really like that!

Wireless is Nice
I did need to use a USB cable (included in the box!) to do the initial setup. After that, I unplugged the cable, and it works perfectly wireless-ly. I love printing from my laptop, from anywhere on the network, and now I'm contemplating where it makes the most sense to setup the printer. Anywhere there is power and it can get signal, it will work.

This printer would be a good fit for small or home businesses that have a wireless network. The flexibility of placing the printer anywhere is a valuable feature.