Design
Battery power, a generous 2.5-inch LCD that swivels 45 degrees for easy viewing, and simple operation make the HP Photosmart 375 a perfect take-along printer. You can leave your AC adapter and computer at home and set up the printer anywhere. Just press the power button, and the front access panel and the rear paper tray automatically open. The large 2.5-inch colour LCD pops up so that you can manually tilt it to a comfortable viewing angle. Drop as many as 20 sheets of paper into the rear tray, insert CompactFlash, SmartMedia, Sony Memory Stick, Secure Digital/MultiMediaCard, or xD-Picture storage media or connect the printer directly to a PictBridge-compatible digital camera, and you're ready to print. You can view images at full size or as nine-per-screen thumbnails on the LCD; you then use a four-way control pad to navigate to and select the photos you want. You can print selected images on individual 4x6-inch pages or as thumbnail index sheets. Alternately, you can print two or four shots per 4x6-inch sheet. Using your camera's DPOF (Digital Print Order Format), you can also preselect images.
This boombox-size, solidly built, just over 1 kg printer measures just 22 by 11.7 by 11.4 cm when zipped up, with an additional 2.5 cm in back and 10 cm in front when the paper trays are pulled out. The straight-through paper path efficiently ushers your prints from the easy-to-load input tray to the front output tray. You'll find it easy to master the controls. The control pad lets you browse individual pictures and make your selections. A zoom rocker magnifies or reduces the image so that you can check details, crop the picture or switch to a thumbnail view. The adjacent Layout button cycles through the basic printing options, and a trio of Delete, Print, and Cancel keys take care of other simple functions.
Features
In the HP Photosmart 375's standalone mode, you can choose to print selected photos, a range of photos or an index. You can also make minor edits: removing red-eye, adjusting brightness, rotating your shot, adding a frame around your image and applying sepia, antique and black-and-white effects. Sharpening, a fill-flash-like digital-flash effect, and a passport-photo mode are also available. Special effects are applied during printing and don't affect your original image.
From within the menu system, you'll find options for displaying your images as a slide show, modifying print-quality settings, and handling maintenance tasks such as cleaning or aligning the print cartridge. The Photosmart 375 can handle JPEG and TIFF image files and several movie formats including AVI, QuickTime and MPEG-1. If you want to make prints of individual video frames, there's also a video print-enhancement mode.
This HP uses a single tricolour ink cartridge, which can be replaced with a greyscale cartridge for printing black-and-white images. You can choose from a large number of 4x6-inch paper options, ranging from an economical everyday semigloss paper to standard, premium and premium-plus stocks. You can also use HP's older papers -- the ones with a tear-off tab -- or the newer papers for printing edge to edge.
The Photosmart 375 is just as easy to use when connected to a computer via USB cable. The included HP Director software can help you transfer images to your computer from the printer's memory slots or open images in the HP Image Zone editor. Alternately, using the printer driver, you can print directly from any application. The driver lacks the special-effects settings available in the printer itself but adds saturation, brightness and colour-balancing sliders for quick corrections.
Performance
The HP Photosmart 375 performed well in CNET Labs' tests. It took around 1.6 minutes to finish a 4x6-inch photo -- very competitive with printers in this class. By contrast, the Epson PictureMate took 2.44 minutes and the Kodak EasyShare Printer Dock 6000 -- one of the fastest portable snapshot printers we've tested to date -- took 1.5 minutes to get the same job done. HP has incorporated its new Vivera ink set and improved printheads into the Photosmart 375, which promises to deliver more vibrant, longer-lasting prints. Wilhelm Imaging Research's test results indicate that the Photosmart 375's prints on the company's new Premium Plus photo paper will last twice as long as those of the Photosmart 245.
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
| Minutes per photo |
Print quality
Our test photos generally looked good, although we had a few complaints. Some colours, particularly pastel shades and yellows, looked washed out, while others, especially reds, seemed overly saturated. There was also a slight reddish tinge in the white, grey and black areas, most likely because the tricolour ink cartridge uses cyan, magenta and black inks to simulate greys. Sharp-eyed viewers could see individual ink dots with the naked eye. The printer was prone to nozzle clogs when left idle for a few days, resulting in pronounced horizontal banding, but that cleared up after a few prints and printhead cleanings.
CNET Labs project leader Dong Van Ngo contributed to this section of the review.
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26/09/2006, 05:33 AM
rating
10/10
The best ever
The only thing I cannot find information on is exactly how long and quality of picture (not fading over generations?)
Pros: all seems to work so well
Cons: none
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