Inkjet-Printer: Heavyweights From Canon, Epson and HP : Introduction
Introduction

Once upon a long time ago (in the 20th century), inkjet printer manufacturers had well-segmented ranges that differed little from one brand to another. Their machines printed out pages in color at a speed and precision proportionate to their price.
The 21st century has revolutionized all of the fanfare.
Technological Limits
The manufacturers have now reached their limits. At the end of 2000, their devices for the non-professional market managed at best 12 pages a minute (Epson Stylus 880) with a resolution of 2400 to 2800 dpi. Now, in late 2003, these values have been doubled. In fact, these new figures - more than 20 ppm and 4800 to 5760 dpi - have been obtained for the last year. Along with that, the size of the drops has fallen from 10 to 2 picoliters on some of the current models. Here again, this drop size has been available on general-market products for a whole year.
But Canon, Epson and HP still had to revise their ranges. The question is, how do you do this when the technologies have not evolved?
To answer this question, each of them finally decided to set off on a new track.
- Next page The Individual Answers
- Multi-purpose Printers: Canon i450 and i470D
- Comparison: Low-Price Multifunction Devices
- Photo Printer: Canon i950
- Entry-Level Printer: Canon i320
- Scanning, Copying, Printing and Faxing: Multifunctional Devices
- A Standalone, at a Price: hp photosmart 7350
- Inkjet Printer: End of the Year Roundup
- Alternatives to HP: Canon S520 and S750
- HP DeskJet 5550: The Star Of The New Season
- The New Speed Freak: Lexmark Z65
- Why no more parallel ports on Dell desktops?
- ups installation question
- Connecting printer: usb or parallel
- Toner on back of page, etc. (HP LaserJet 4600n)
- HP laser printers
- hp 1200 all-in-one
- How to reset chip in HP Business Inkjet 1100D?
- 8 foot parallel to usb cable?
- MFP recommendations...
- How do I reset my ink levels?