An excellent all-in-one printer for the home and small office, the C6380 pairs great photo printouts with an easy to use interface.
The largest e-waste recycling centre in the southern hemisphere was opened this week in Sydney's Villawood amid controversy over the Federal Government's refusal to commit to a mandatory e-waste recycling policy.
The Lexmark X7675 is a network-ready multifunction printer that promises much, but delivers little with its average print quality and frustrating setup process.
This affordable multifunction printer is suitable for light users and students, offering print, scan and copy capabilities for under $100.
Affordable all-in-one printers are a dime a dozen these days, but from the looks of it the C5380 may just be one of the best.
The Alaris30 is a 3D object printer that can produce 600x600dpi objects with movable parts.
Lexmark has unveiled a range of new printers targeted at the home and professional consumer, all with a strong focus on sustainability and environmental friendliness.
We know they can design cars, but can the Italians do printers? An industrial design team in Milan has turned its hand to Epson's latest Stylus Photo TX range.
The Dell V305w is an inexpensive all-in-one printer that also connects wirelessly to your home network. However, the output quality needs significant improvement, and the cost to maintain the printer is much higher than the industry standard.
The HP Deskjet F4280 is an affordable printer for students and home users as it does a pretty good job of printing. However, if you also need a scanner that does a top job then this all-in-one printer is not for you.
The Deskjet D4360 justifies its asking price nicely. At the same time, you do get exactly what you pay for.
A bare bones desktop printer with a minimum of features and accessories, the HP Deskjet D2560 is really only suitable for printing basic black and white pages. Don't trust it with your photographs.
Students on a budget should consider the X4650, but only against the vast raft of other MFDs on the market.
Kodak sells the ESP 5 on its cheap printing capabilities. Sadly, in this context, cheap equals not very good.
The Canon Selphy CP770 is a neat, little dye-sublimation printer that includes a bucket for easy travel, but the battery pack which would make it totally portable is not included.
You can now make Picture Movie DVDs at your local Kodak printing kiosk.
The Brother MFC-7440N prints quickly and is fairly inexpensive to sustain, but we simply can't get behind a printer with poor quality graphics, significant hardware defects, and a boring design.
It isn't cheap compared to standard printers, but the Canon Pixma iP100 has the highest resolution available in the mobile printer market and prints at an impressive speed to boot. If you simply must have a printer with you at all times, the iP100 should be the do-it-all at your side.
It's a step back in the style stakes, but there's still plenty to like about Lexmark's latest small office wireless printer.
Polaroid has partnered with Zink for wireless, inkless photo printing aimed at tech-savvy teens.
An excellent all-in-one printer for the home and small office, the C6380 pairs great photo printouts with an easy to use interface.
The Lexmark X7675 is a network-ready multifunction printer that promises much, but delivers little with its average print quality and frustrating setup process.
This affordable multifunction printer is suitable for light users and students, offering print, scan and copy capabilities for under $100.
Affordable all-in-one printers are a dime a dozen these days, but from the looks of it the C5380 may just be one of the best.
We know they can design cars, but can the Italians do printers? An industrial design team in Milan has turned its hand to Epson's latest Stylus Photo TX range.
The future of... Mobile device chargers
2008/11/20 10:49:27
2008/11/20 10:29:31
2008/11/20 10:47:56
Australia's giant e-waste recycling centre: Photos
The largest e-waste recycling centre in the southern hemisphere was opened this week in Sydney's Villawood amid controversy over the Federal Government's refusal to commit to a mandatory e-waste recycling policy.
Photos: Annoying hardware, a rogues' gallery
Hardware may be less 'in your face' than software, but it can still ruin your day. We've listed our main bugbears: let us know if you agree.
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