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I bought 5 inkjets and 5 lasers for my home and office. After 3 years, the inkjets for home printing all clogged. The inkjets for office printing still prints but with noticeable degradation in image quality. All lasers for home and office use still worked flawlessly. Enough said
I print so irregularly that I have to clear the inkjet printer of clogs. I'm guessing a laserjet printer will work when I need it even if it sits inactive for months.
If there are long gaps between print jobs, you may want to swap out your paper as well. When a few sheets sit open in the paper tray, they absorb moisture from the air and can swell slightly, making them more prone to cause a paper jam.
Years ago I purchased an HP inkjet printer on sale for $39.99 and was very happy with the price. Over the next 7 years I must have invested close to $1,000 in print cartridges because each refill was more money than the printer. I swore I would never do that again. A few years ago I bought a Canon TS8320 printer with 6 ink cartridges. Fortunately there were 3rd party vendors to purchase the refill cartridges and the cost was not nearly as bad. After giving this printer to my significant other I decided to buy a Xerox B235 laser printer with a scanner and sheet feeder. Hope that works out for me as it is not my priority to print color.
The biggest pro for home users of laser printer that it won't dry up as most home users, use it very occasionally. If you'd go for inkjet printer - you'd need to basically print something like once or twice a week (something that uses all ink cartridges - so black + yellow + magenta + cyan, so that all get to work). If you forget for few weeks, your cartridges may be ruined and depending on printer - printer heads on the printer itself may be ruined. You get laser printer and literally never care to periodically print something on it, you use it when you need it.
Also if you print very occasionally, I would still go for the Laser (maybe a cheaper Laser). This is due to the ink drying up (Toner doesn't). It isn't just good for high volume industries.
It's very striking how well diagnosed the open office concept was described here in this 2 YO vid. Maybe what the expert couldn't figure at the time, was the rise of office phone booths (or office pods), to deal with the downturns of open office, like the lack of privacy and silence at the time of a conference call, or some hour for a deep anaylisis. Manhattan Office Design #OfficeDesign #NYC
Couldn't agree more. In the last 12+ months we have seen quite a few new lines of privacy rooms / phone booths / quiet spaces hit the market. There has also been a huge increase in options for sound-absorptive materials (ex. light fixtures, wall coverings, workstation panels, decor, etc.). Lots of change!
I'm going with laser. Seems ink printers jam a lot. Exspecially when you dont use it much. I only need a printer to print out my bloodtest which so do twice a year. So tired of driving to library to print one thing out.
Superb! liked it ! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-fzV1QEGQH7o.html - our new project. Want to see where SK goes for practice in ECR! our project for Sanjay!😀
Dear sir, I use ink print to print flash card in color a lot, I used non factory ink. It is low cost, but can laser print do the better job? Flash card must be waterproof, they told me the laser cartridge is much expensive then ink..
Some can/does, and it depends on which materials or panels you have chosen (ex. wood panels vs glass panes vs fabric panels) but most of the time they are comparable or superior to drywall (depending on the thickness and insulation).
Good laser printers are printing in a better quality than inkjet ones. Inkjet printers are cheaper and not so good. All the rest is just bla, bla, bla.
Inkjet printers gotten a lot better in the last years and there are printers with cheap ink options. Because of the health issues relates to Laser printers I would always opt for Ink. You should include the health aspect in your video.
@@condor6327 Laser printers disturb small particles into the air. If you operate a laser printer in a small room without ventilation, where you spend a lot of time it's like smoking. Bad for your lungs. That's why most offices have their printers in separate rooms or on the hallways. But I only have a small office and my printer sits right next to my desk, so that was the main reason for me to go with ink. I just think one should add that to a video that compares Ink with laser. The health risks are manageable in many instances but you should know and plan accordingly. There are images of lung scans of people that worked in printer shops that are really scary. When you change the toner, that is when the most particles are dispensed into the air and some employees did that a lot of times every day for their lives to demonstrate how the printer works to customers. It's probably not a bad idea to wear a FFP2 mask when changing the toner. Especially now that everyone has one handy.
I ended up getting the chair. I'm an above average height woman and my feet do not touch the ground flat in this chair even at the lowest height setting (I got a custom one with the lower base too).
so weird, im like 190cm and its fine on the highest height setting? are you 200cm+ :o that would be rough, i had problems finding a nice chair event at 190cm