Despite all the news in the past week about HP exiting the PC business, printers and ink look like a profitable mainstay market for the technology giant and it has put an impressive amount of work into adding social media, online tools and anywhere printing via AirPrint for iOS devices and Google CloudPrint.
Internet connectivity appears to be the order of the day with the latest generation of printers and some of the apps that appear on the digital screen such as Disney ensure that children can be kept entertained as you can print out puzzles and drawings for them to colour, for example.
What is particularly cool about this device – let’s call it the iPhone of the printer world – is its design and some of the futuristic things it can do.
It features a glittery finish and is designed to fit in anywhere in the home or the office.
When I first switched it on I was very impressed by the robotics effect of the LCD screen lifting itself up and the printer tray revolving so all that was missing was some R2-D2 bleeps and the effect would have been complete.
As a connected printer the idea is that you can connect via Wi-Fi to notebooks, tablets and smartphones to do your printing. As an A4 printer I found it did an impressive job. Set-up was easy enough once I matched the IP address of the printer with the software on my PC and for a few weeks all was well.
However, a Service Pack update on my Windows 7 computer, caused some problems with drivers and I spent the best part of a morning trying to update the software. This is a major bugbear of mine – in a world where smartphone ups can be updated over the air without causing problems why is the Windows world in such a sorry state when it comes to driver updates. It’s painful and if I struggled with it, how are ordinary printer users – parents and children – meant to put up with it.
After the problem was resolved I was back in business and the machine itself gave no problems. As well as Wi-Fi printing, it features USB and SD-card ports so budding photographers can print directly from the machine.

It's rare that you can find an all-in-one printer that wouldn't look out of place in your living room. But that seems to be what HP has achieved with its Envy all-in-one printer which it is targeting at the back-to-school market. Despite all the news
We also clocked the Kodak ESP Office 2170 All-in-One Printer ($149.99, 4 stars) at 3.0 ppm, while the HP Photosmart Plus e-All-in-One ($149 direct, 4 stars) printed out the same tests at 3.2 ppm. The Editors' Choice Epson Stylus NX625 ($149 direct,

The HP TouchPad was such an overwhelming disaster that it's reduced Hewlett Packard down to being a printer company in the same manner in which the TouchPad's webOS predecessor the Palm Pre was such a disaster that it ended Palm's

This printer' s control panel consists of two buttons, Power and Resume/Cancel buttons located on the right-front—not much to figure out here. The Pixma iP4920 looks like a smaller version of Canon's Pixma all-in-one printers, such as the $149.99

HP's printer and data center divisions benefit from "bundled" contracts with corporate customers who buy an assortment of tech products, including PCs, and from volume discounts that HP negotiates with its suppliers for those products.
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