On 09/12/2014 08:23 PM, Valeri Galtsev wrote:
On Fri, September 12, 2014 12:08 pm, m.roth@5-cent.us wrote:
Frank Cox wrote:
On Fri, 12 Sep 2014 12:52:53 -0400 Mauricio Tavares wrote:
If it makes you feel any better, I found out a new cartridge for
my home laser printer is $45 while the new version of my printer is $10 more.
It's my understanding that the cartridges that come with new printers usually contain less ink or toner than the replacement cartridges do. They are called a "starter cartridge" to differentiate them from the replacement ones.
They all do, toner and ink. Less is defined, by the way, as "half as much, literally, as the full replacement".
Lets them diminish "apparent" cost of new printer, thus making their printer look less expensive and more competitive to what competitions have. After all they do the same...
Also, the majority of buyers never look into technical part, just compare products using "pricegrabber" ;-) Which is the reality that doesn't do much good for the progress. I'm having in mind really good hardware which also lasts forever. (and still works when it is obsolete, which though sounds counter-productive)
My wife still prefers the color rendering on our HP7310; all her letterheads are set up for it and print the 'wrong' color on the HP8500 and HP8600. The 8500 is still around as that is all I can print to from my corporate notebook, and only when I am off the vpn; so it is off most of the time.
So we have 3 all-in-one printers that are used for different tasks. And none of them support T.38...