Fitur Produk dan Rincian Teknis
Fitur Produk
- Cetak, Copy, Scan, Fax
- Wireless cetak
- Tinggi kapasitas baki kertas
- Pemasok dokumen otomatis
- Sensor kertas cerdas mendeteksi ukuran dan jenis kertas
Rincian Teknis
Auto-Pengumpan Dokumen
why buy a printer is only useful for printing from a computer if there is a printermultipurpose
Product Description
Stop overpaying for ink and make the smart investment with the KODAK ESP Office 2170 All-in-One Printer. Kodak offers the lowest total ink replacement cost so your home office can save money.* And you'll save time too, with a suite of tools that will get you to those early a.m. meetings with time to spare. The versatile ESP Office 2170 Printer lets you print, copy, scan, and fax. It's an affordable 4-in-1 bundle of business efficiency that makes the most of every dollar, and every minute. So you'll never worry about hitting print again. One system, four great functions - print, copy, scan, and fax capabilities in a compact rear feed design delivering crisp, sharp documents and graphics and KODAK Lab-Quality Photos that last a lifetime. Easy Wi-Fi setup to connects to your wireless home network. Send scans to your PC, e-mail, network folders, memory cards, or USB flash drive. Print photos in multiple sizes directly from your iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad device3 with the KODAK Pic Flick App. Use the photo sort feature to easily find and view your pictures on your memory card by month, day, or year via the printer LCD. Accomplish critical business tasks effortlessly with the easy-to-use control panel and 1.5" display
*As compared to leading consumer inkjet printers’ total ink load replacement costs using manufacturers’ recommended standard ink cartridges available in single-quantity pricing (i.e., no multi-packs, high capacity, combo packs, value packs or special promotions); excludes printers that use only one cartridge. Based on independent third-party price survey data obtained June 2010.
Our old cannon all-in one printer finally died and will no longer feed envelopes. Plus it guzzles ink like its going out of style. Time to buy a new printer. Yuck... Naturally this involves spending 2 hours at office max looking at all the overlapping variations of printers and getting useless help from store personnel:
Employee #1: I hear Lexmark is pretty good, you should buy this one (points at random $300 printer)
Employee #2, 30 minutes later: I really don't recommend Lexmark, Epson is the way to go (gestures in the general direction of the Epson aisle).
So I resort to using my iPhone and trying to read multi-page printer reviews on the 3" screen. At it turns out, both the Lexmark and Epson I am looking at get stinky reviews, so I decide to go with a Brother for $59. If I can't have good, might as well go for cheap.
I'm on my way to the register, cart loaded with ink, printer and paper, when I pass a display for Kodak printers. What catches my eye is the "lowest per-page ink cost in the industry" signage. Indeed, genuine cartridges are only $10, rather than $40 for the Brother. Suddenly it occurs to me that this Brother printer isn't going to be very cheap in the long run.
Now I'm intrigued, so the iPhone comes out again. A 3rd employee hovers at a safe distance, probably trying to work up the courage to talk to this clearly frazzled customer.
Of course the Kodak is a new model, so all I can find out is that it has a patented pigment-based ink that is supposed to last 100 years and the reviewer thinks the printer prints "above average" photos (whatever that means). Now my daughter is starting to fuss and my feet are tired so I dump the Brother back on the shelf and grab the $150 Kodak. If nothing else, I can be confident my smudged and off-color home photo prints will be inexpensive to throw away.
So I take it and home and....
1) Turn on.
2) Install software.
3) Print photo.
I left all the settings on auto, used my old photo paper from Costco and just let it rip. I figure I might as well get a baseline and find out how much time and ink I am going to waste getting all the colors and settings dialed in.
When the photo came out I almost fell over. It looked beautiful, nearly identical to the exact same photo we had paid to have professionally developed a week earlier. And I didn't have to adjust a dang thing. Revolutionary I tell you.
Now if you were to hold them up close in your hand you can definitely tell the inkjet because it has that faint grainy "inkjet" texture to the lighter tones, so it's not perfect. But for a little $150 box that also sends faxes and scans things I was quite amazed.
Kudos to Kodak for making my life a little easier, and for leading the way in lowering the cost of printing.
Do you like this Printer ? Click here
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar