Saturday, March 28, 2009

Lexmark announced new laser MFUs

The U.S. printer manufacturer, Lexmark, announced the release of 9 monochrome MFUs in three new model lineups. All the new devices include printing, scanning and copying functions with optional faxing. Their price ranges from USD399 to USD999.


Lexmark X264DN

At the price low end, Lexmark offers the new X260 series, such as the X264DN, at the price of USD399. This MFU with the speed of 30 ppm and a 550-sheet tray, flatbed scanner and auto feeder targets individuals and small work groups.


Lexmark X363DN

At the middle end of the price range, the X360 series is represented by the USD499 X363DN multifunctional device. The new printer is 35 ppm speedy. It scans can be sent directly to any computer in the network with the Lexmark Network Scan center software.


Lexmark X463D

At the high end of the new models, we find the X460 series, such as the USD999 X463DE. This model targets small work groups and middle-size offices. It prints up to 40 ppm single sided or 18 ppm in duplex. The firs page out time is just around 6.5 seconds. The printer also has a 7-inch touch screen interface that can be configured for easier access to functions. Network scanning is also supported, but fax support is only available as an add-on feature.

Source: Lexmark.com

Key words:Lexmark, new products, MFUs, new models, monochrome printing.

HP explores non-traditional areas for printing

In one of the articles of San Diego Business Journal there is an interesting overview and analysis about the activity and plans of the imaging and printing group of the US. printer manufacturer, the world known Hewlett-Packard. Here are some excerpts from the article. The full-text article is available here.

The company that built an empire selling a printer with every computer is struggling to reinvent itself as environmentally minded consumers eschew paper.

Hewlett-Packard, whose $23 billion Imaging and Printing Group is based in San Diego, has been working to identify nontraditional printing markets — essentially seeking to be the solution wherever words and graphics are printed.

On the quarter that ended Jan. 31, IPG’s net revenues fell 18 percent to $5.98 billion, compared to the year before. Unit sales in commercial hardware fell 39 percent and sales in consumer hardware fell 31 percent on the quarter; and net revenue in commercial hardware fell 34 percent, consumer hardware fell 37 percent and supplies fell 7 percent.

HP said it would decrease operating expenses and boost printer supply sales — essentially increase the life cycle of products and use ink and toner sales to augment revenues, says Gary Peterson, a principal analyst with Gap Intelligence in San Diego.
“That’s the profit driver for them. A third of HP’s overall profits come from its inks and toner,” he said.

HP has identified other areas that require printing — like photo printer kiosks at retail outlets, outdoor signage and even aspirin. “I think HP’s biggest challenge is to get people to print, regardless if they’re buying printers or not,” said Peterson. “HP launched a number of efforts to drive print volumes.”

HP has made huge investments in its Edgeline Technology to handle high-volume, commercial printing to compete against analog presses.

“There are 59 trillion pages of print. Digital is only 10 percent of the market,” said spokeswoman Alison Graves.

Most printing is still dominated by analog presses. HP only commands 2 percent of the worldwide printing market.

“The future is not far,” Hopkins said. “The point is that printed material is all around us.”
Employees in San Diego are testing environmentally friendly pigments and equipment that use less energy. IPG is partnering with pharmaceutical companies to print anti-piracy protected logos onto medical pills. And IPG this quarter rolled out the commercial Inkjet Web Press for small to medium-size publishers.

Transforming into IBM

The printing industry is a mature one, and there is a movement within HP to use IPG’s 18.5 percent profit margin not to grow the printing segment, but move it into IT services, where IBM dominates, says Peterson.

“What we’ve seen from (CEO) Mark Hurd is that he’s very interested in infrastructure services. He wants to slowly evolve HP into IBM.” And they’re using IPG profits to power that transition, he said.

“It’s really a matter of IPG funding the transitional costs of acquiring EDS and funding how that division of HP grows and succeeds,” he said. “They purchased EDS to get a better foothold in the enterprise market.”

For example, when IBM approaches a huge company like General Motors, it can give them high-level customized server, software, hardware and support.

“That’s what HP wants to do,” Peterson said.

Source: San Diego Business Journal

Key words: HP, new strategy, environment, business opportunities.

Saturday, March 21, 2009

HP is about to suspend production in Kiryat Gat, Israel

HP is expected to shut down a number of wide digital printer production lines at the HP Indigo plant for one to three months. There is concern that the shut-down will persist, resulting in layoffs. HP has about 5,000 employees in Israel.

The economic crisis has hit the digital printer industry hard. In Israel, a number of companies in the industry are streamlining, including Kodak Israel Ltd. which fired 250 employees and moved one of its production lines to China.

HP's printer and imaging division saw a 20% drop in sales in the fourth fiscal quarter, which ended in January 2009, compared with the corresponding quarter, to $6 billion. Sales of digital printers fell 33%, and sales of commercial printers fell 40%. With results like these, HP has launched drastic cost-cutting measures.

HP Indigo is based on Indigo NV, which HP acquired in 2002 for $720 million. HP Indigo has 1,500 employees at two plants in Kiryat Gat, which manufacture digital printers and ink, and at its R&D center in the Ness Ziona Science Park.

The HP Indigo printer plant has 600-700 employees. The ink plant, set up in 2004 at an investment of $100 million, is smaller, with tens of employees. There could be mass layoffs if the halt in production is prolonged.

HP Indigo denies that it is contemplating layoffs. It said in response, "HP Indigo has no plans to lay off employees at this stage. The company, like every responsible company in the economy, adjusts its production to the current market conditions."

Source: www.globes-online.com

Key words: HP, Israel, layoff, printers, factory

Ricoh to launch new laser printers


Ricoh launched its newest range of functional and innovative laser printers, including the Aficio SP C821DN , one of the fastest laser printers in its class.

The new Aficio SP C821DN boasts of an unprecedented 50ppm speed and can handle a whopping 200,000 prints per month.
The new printers launched are:
Aficio SP C821DN: A3 colour laser, 50ppm
Aficio SP C820DN: A3 colour laser, 40ppm
Aficio SP 4210N: A4 mono laser, 36ppm
Aficio SP 4100NL: A4 mono laser, 31ppm

Source: www.computerworld.com.au

Key words: Ricoh, printers, laser, news, innovation

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Sony will buy LCD Production Equipment from Epson

Bloomberg.com has announced that Sony will buy equipment for manufacturing liquid-crystal displays from Seiko Epson Corp. The purchase will be part of an alliance between the Japanese electronics makers that will be formalized in a contract at the end of June.

Buying additional manufacturing capacity will enable Sony to expand market share as rival LCD makers including LG Display Co. and Sharp Corp. report losses and close factories. Epson, which widened its full-year loss forecast to a record on March 13, 2009, said it would be “difficult” to improve earnings from the business on its own as the global recession erodes demand for computers and mobile phones.

The two companies didn’t disclose purchase details in the statement, and Sony’s Kitsukawa didn’t give a price.

Seiko Epson said it will close an LCD plant central Japan by the end of September 2009 and concentrate output of the panels at its factory in Tottori prefecture, in the west of the country.

Japan’s largest maker of inkjet printers, Seiko Epson said it expects a record net loss of 100 billion yen ($1 billion) for the year ending March 31 because of costs to reorganize its flat-panel and semiconductor operations.

Source: www.bloomberg.com

Key words: Sony, Epson, agreement, LCDs

HP Resolves Ink Cartridge Patent Infringement with LexJet Corporation

HP announced that it has resolved the dispute and dismissed a patent infringement lawsuit against Florida-based LexJet Corporation and LexJet Southern California, LLC, regarding inks used in certain remanufactured HP large-format ink cartridges.

On May 22, 2008, HP filed a lawsuit against LexJet in the U.S. Federal Court for the Northern District of California.

HP and the ink manufacturer supplying ink to LexJet have developed a solution to avoid legal action. LexJet’s ink manufacturer has agreed to reformulate the inks in question and pay HP an undisclosed amount of money.

“HP is pleased to have resolved this matter quickly, and we remain committed to vigorously protecting our investment in intellectual property,” said Stephen Nigro, senior vice president, Inkjet and Web Services Business, Imaging and Printing Group, HP. “As part of HP’s ongoing worldwide testing and enforcement efforts, we will continue to monitor LexJet and others for possible patent infringement.”

Source: www.hp.com

Key words: HP, court, agreement, LexJet

Thursday, March 12, 2009

RechargEast Magazine, MARCH'09 issue


READ IN THE MARCH'09 ISSUE:

» Re-manufacturing the Lexmark E260/360/460 Toner Cartridge
» TOSHIBA MJ-1015 MJ-1016 FINISHERS – LET’S “FINISH” THE COPY/PRINT JOB (part VI)

» SPEED INFOTECH, China
» Huiwei Corporation's Biggest Export Customers are in ... RUSSIA!

» Contribution of Cartridge Remanufacturing to Staying Carbon Neutral
» HP Laser Jet 1005/1006/1505 Cartridge Remanufacturing Tips

Full page e-version of the magazine is also available here:

Download the MARCH'09 issue.

Key words: remanufacturing in Eastern Europe, chips, cartridges, toner, inks, compatible cartridges, inkjet, supplies, markets

Brother introduced new laser All-In-Ones and Printers


Brother announced three new laser printers (HL-5300 Series from $199 to $299) and two new laser all-in-ones (MFC-8000 Series from $399 to $499), each including key enhancements over the current model it replaces. Each model provides small to medium businesses with fast print speeds (up to 32ppm), automatic duplex printing and optional high-yield replacement toner cartridges. All new models will be available beginning in April 2009.

New HL-5300 Series

New Models: HL-5340D, HL-5370DW & HL-5370DWT

Replaces Current: HL-5240, HL-5250DN, HL-5250DNT & HL-5280DW

New HL-5340D key features:

* Up to 32ppm print speed
* Built-in automatic duplex capability for two-sided printing
* 16MB memory
* Increased high-yield replacement toner cartridge available (up to 8,000 pages(2))(3)
* 300-sheet paper capacity, expandable up to 800-sheet(1)
* Estimated Street Price: $199*

New HL-5370DW key features:

All the features of the HL-5340D, plus:

* Built-in wireless (802.11 b/g) network interface
* Built-in Ethernet network interface
* 32MB of standard memory, expandable to 544MB(1)
* Estimated Street Price: $249

New HL-5370DWT key features:

All the features of the HL-5370DW, plus:

* Second 250-sheet paper tray that boosts total input capacity to 550-sheets
* Estimated Street Price: $299

New MFC-8000 Series

New Models: MFC-8480DN & MFC-8890DW

Replaces Current: MFC-8460N, MFC-8860DN & MFC-8870DW

New MFC-8480DN key features:

* Up to 32ppm monochrome print speed
* Built-in automatic duplex capability (for two-sided printing)
* Up to 1200 x 1200 dpi print quality
* 300-sheet paper capacity, expandable up to 550-sheets
* USB Direct Interface, allows users to print from or scan to their USB Flash memory drive (PDF and JPEG)
* Increased high-yield replacement toner cartridge available (up to 8,000 pages(2))(3)
* Estimated Street Price: $399

New MFC-8890DW key features:

All the features of the MFC-8480DN, plus:

* Built-in wireless (802.11 b/g) network interface
* Full duplex capability (print/copy/scan/fax)
* Estimated Street Price: $499

Source: brother.com

Key words: Brother, new printers, laser

Dell adds up three printers to its lineup of printing devices

Dell has added three laser printers to its printer product line. These additions to Dell’s printer lineup recognize the growing demand for small footprint, multifunction devices that can print, copy, fax and scan, saving consumers and small-medium businesses time and money.

The printers introduced today are two color multifunction laser printers and one budget-priced offering in the black & white category.

Each printer is Energy Star certified and RoHS compliant, which helps minimize their impact on the environment.

Dell 1235cn Color Laser Multifunction Printer is network ready and is one of the world’s smallest color laser multifunction printers with an automatic document feeder. Even with a small form factor, it is capable of delivering vibrant color print/copy at up to 4ppm in color and up to 17ppm (letter) in mono, on a small business budget (actual speeds will vary with use).

Dell 2145cn Color Laser Multifunction Printer is designed to meet the needs of small and medium workgroup looking for vibrant color, built in duplex printing and copying, and an exceptional long-term value. It delivers professional-quality prints and copies with fast print speeds of up to 21ppm in color and 21ppm (letter) in mono (actual speeds will vary with use). It features 350 sheets standard input capacity and options such as a 500-sheet paper tray, 256MB memory and 80GB hard disk.

Dell 2230d Black and White Laser Printer is targeted for single user, direct-connect usage and meets the needs of customers looking for a high performance desktop laser printer. It offers a fast print speed of up to 35ppm (letter) (actual speeds will vary with use), and standard double-sided (duplex) printing.

Source: eon.businesswire.com

Key words:Dell, laser printers, eco

Monday, March 09, 2009

Epson integrated toner is supposed to cut out third party supplies

Epson is piloting a consumables free inkjet printer that comes pre-loaded with enough toner to produce 8,500 colour pages, a strategic move that would effectively cut out third party toner cartridge manufacturers that have encroached on sales.
 
The EC-01 device comes with a sealed unit attached and when the ink runs dry the Japanese vendor will pick up the box, replace it and send it to be recycled. Epson reps say the product was being quietly introduced “to market test the idea of a printer that contains consumables for a reasonable amount of time”.
 
“We are trying to establish the principle of whether this business model will pay back the customer and ourselves,” says one of the vips of the company.
 
In recent years Epson has brought several court cases against third party suppliers alleging patent infringement in the UK and USA.
 
According to the company the new printer should lock out third party cartridge providers because it changes the nature of the business model.

Source: www.microscope.co.uk

Key words: new technology, Epson, aftermarket supplies

Terrible times for the copier industry

As the British media mentions, British companies selling and leasing Japanese manufactured goods have been forced to up their prices after negative GBP to Euro and Euro to Yen exchange rate trends worsen, forcing an increase in cost prices.

The GBP to Euro and Euro to Yen exchange rate has been causing serious problems for British companies purchasing Japanese manufactured products over recent months. A large majority of office¬ photocopier and multifunctional device brands are manufactured in Japan, including, Ricoh, Fuji Xerox, Sharp, Konica Minolta, Kyocera Mita, Panasonic, Toshiba and Canon. Taking Canon as an example, it can be shown how much these exchange rates can affect photocopier costs. Canon Europe headquarters purchase their machines, parts and toner in Yen from the manufacturers. The Euro to Yen exchange rate has become weaker and weaker over the past 6 months, increasing purchasing prices by 30 percent. These products are then bought by Canon UK and, with the¬ GBP being weak against the Euro Canon have had to endure an increase in cost prices by another 30 percent. This means that before the products have even reached the suppliers they could have incurred a price increase of up to and beyond 60 percent. The negative GBP to Euro and Euro to Yen exchange rate has forced photocopier manufacturers such as Canon and Ricoh to pass some of the price increases on to their UK suppliers and dealerships, leaving these businesses in a difficult situation.

Genuine parts
The cost price increase inclu¬des all genuine parts and toner supplied by the photocopier manufacturers. This means businesses offering leasing of copiers are suddenly seeing substantially increased costs to replace toner and service these devices. Some companies might be tempted to use sub-standard parts and toner to try to keep costs down. Many of the parts and toners that are not genuine brands are manufactured outside Japan and so do not have the same problems of negative exchange rate trends. These products therefore remain cheap to purchase. However, most reputable and reliable photocopier companies would only ever use genuine parts and toner. Non-genuine parts and toner can not only make the manufacturer's warranty invalid but are often of sub-standard quality meaning that the prints they create are of a poor standard and they may ruin the device or decrease its lifespan

Difficult Times
The cost price increases leave photocopier companies in a difficult position. Although some of the increases have been absorbed by the big manufacturers, it still leaves the authorized dealers with limited options, none of which are very appealing. The first option would be to buy non-genuine parts and toner to keep costs down, which most good companies would not even consider doing. The second option would be to cut costs in other areas, such as reducing the number of servicing engineers, which would mean the customer would receive sub-standard servicing on their machine, with much slower response times. The last option which many businesses are being forced into, having no other options left, is to pass a percentage of the price increases over to their customers.

Increasing prices for c¬ustomers is something that most businesses would try extremely hard to avoid. With the ever changing financial climate businesses are finding that this is exactly what they have to do, which, at a time when many businesses are struggling, losing more customers over the price increases could be disastrous.

Reprinted from here.

Key words: copiers, markets, economic crisis

Friday, March 06, 2009

Cartridge World sees profit increase in economic turmoil

Despite unfavourable economic conditions, there still some business that thrive, mentions the web portal www.kndo.com. Cartridge World stores all across the U.S. are reporting higher sales numbers. The two local branches, one in Kennewick, and one in Pasco, report a 9% increase in 2008. They've already seen an even bigger jump in sales in the first two months of 2009.

President of the Tri-Cities stores, Kay Brewer, says companies that are helping people save money, are the ones doing well in today's market. She says everyone is trying to save money, and buying recycled print cartridges is just one way. Brewer explains, "They're around 30% to 40% off of what a new one is, and the best part is that you don't have to wait when you come in. We have them ready to go, so it's one trip; you save gas too."

Brewer calls Cartridge World a "recession proof" business. She says more companies and schools are turning to them to save money, instead of buying brand new toner, which costs more.

The company is doing so well that they are opening a new branch in Walla Walla in May, and they've even hiring.

Source: www.kndo.com

Key words:Cartridge World, companies, news, recession

Samsung launches program to combat toner cartridge counterfeiting

Samsung Electronics America has announced this week the success of a program designed to help protect customers and resellers from counterfeit laser cartridges, part of a worldwide anti-counterfeiting effort by Samsung that uses security features and experienced investigators and prosecutors to identify and indict those engaged in the manufacture and distribution of imitation product.

Since 2008, this effort has resulted in at least 13 seizures of cartridges, components, supplies and equipment that have a collective retail value exceeding $3 million. Efforts have netted over 30,000 cartridges and components found in the United States, Brazil, Peru and Bolivia.

As the company states, the effort seeks to protect customers from the poor print quality, short cartridge life spans, toner leakages and printer failures associated with counterfeit product, which ultimately leads to higher printing and maintenance costs.

Source: http://www.isc-inc.org

Key words:Samsung, counterfeit, cartridges

Sony's new dye sublimation photo printer

Sony has announced a new professional dye sublimation printer, the Sony UP-DR80 photo printer. The new printer provides photographers, portrait studios and retailers a reliable solution for producing high quality digital photo prints.

The new printer’s features include the ability to print on both glossy and matte supports, fast print speeds, and an advanced dye sublimation process that does not require many of the harmful chemicals used in film-based printers.


The new printer is also among the smallest and lightest full-page, dye sublimation printers available today.

Source: www.sony.com

Key words:Sony, companies, printers, dye sublimation