Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Ecofont promises to cut ink consumption by 20%

SPRANQ, a company from Holland, announced that it invented a new environmentally friendly font named Ecofont.

Ecofont is a newly designed font featuring small circular holes in letters. Having holes inside printed letters may help cut ink usage by as much as 20%. The use of the new font can reduce significantly ink printing expenses and, thus, the Dutch company believes, it will help spread environmental awareness.

Previously, SPRANQ has already experimented with fonts by offering zebra-like and partial letter font models. As the company's founder Gerjon Zomer says, it's necessary to preserve the size and outline of letters to keep them readable. By making analogy with Swiss-made cheese, the company came up with a holed-letter design. The new Ecofont is effective in 9 or 10 sizes on paper.

SPRANQ provides Ecofont free for home users and for businesses at its website www.ecofont.eu.

Key words: technology, fonts, printing expenses, economy

Friday, April 10, 2009

Kyocera Mita added new printers to its ECOSYS printer line

This week Kyocera Mita announced the launch of three new ECOSYS monochrome laser printers. The new printers FS-4020DN, FS-3920DN and FS-2020DN – feature the usual printing system adopted by Kyocera: the ECOSYS drum stays separately from the toner container and it doesn’t need to be replaced every time the toner unit is replaced.

The FS-4020DN prints at the speed of 47 ppm. The printer offers a maximum paper capacity of 2,500 sheets, a maximum duty cycle of 250,000 pages per month and it also supports two-side printing.


The FS-3920DN has a slightly reduced duty cycle (200,000 pages per month) and slower print speeds (up to 42 ppm).


The FS-2020DN prints at the speed of up to 37 ppm. Its maximum paper capacity is 1,100 sheets and the duty cycle is 150,000 sheets per month.


All three printers support several Kyocera network and device management tools as well as well as the Kyocera Command Center, a built-in web interface. They also feature 128MB of standard memory and a USB Host Interface.

The FS-4020DN, FS-3920DN and FS-2020DN are available through Kyocera dealers for the recommended retail price of $1583, $1424, and $1044, respectively.

Key words: Kyocera, printers, monochrome, laser

Thursday, April 09, 2009

RechargEast Magazine, APRIL'09 issue


READ IN THE APRIL'09 ISSUE:

» Re-manufacturing the Lexmark E260/360/460 Drum Unit
» Toshiba MJ-1015 MJ-1016 Finishers – Let's “Finish” the Copy/Print Job (part VII)

» Building trust is what counts! Kvisko d.o.o, Montenegro

» Hunting the "Green" Bird
» Enlighten the Dark Western Minds

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

Download the APRIL'09 issue.

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

HP plans to boost sales of MFUs to small and medium businesses in Asia

According to Hewlett-Packard, the current financial crisis can create a huge demand for multifunctional printers. The company recently launched three new LaserJet MFPs to help small and medium enterprises manage their operations anchored on productivity, cost-efficiency and flexibility.

The HP LaserJet M1319f is currently the company’s most affordable monochrome printer. It has four-in-one features of print, copy, scan and fax. This unit can print 18 to 19 letter sized pages per minute or a maximum count of 8,000 pages monthly. It can reduce or enlarge images from 25 percent up to 400 percent.

The HP Color LaserJet CM1312 has the same highlights as the previous model, plus an energy-saving feature called instant-on technology that prints the first page faster when it detects the system is near low power mode. It has a network connectivity using a high-speed USB (universal serial bus) 2.0 port.

For companies needing high volume printing and imaging requirements, the HP Color LaserJet CM 2320n can print 20 to 21 colored pages per minute or up to 40,000 pages a month. Its software is compatible with Windows, Macintosh and Linux and has built-in Ethernet for faster networking. This model does not have a fax feature.

According to the company's representative in Philippines, for instance, the company will continue its marketing aggressive campaign for MFPs. HP is looking at the specific need of industries to successfully cater all market segments and see if it can launch more printer models in the second half of 2009.

Source: Businessmirror.com.ph

Key words: HP, Asia, Philippines, market, printers, MFUs

Lyra Research's President will attend the Imaging Materials Symposium

Lyra Research announces that Lyra President Charles LeCompte will keynote and Lyra Senior Analyst Cortney Kasuba will be a featured speaker at the 2009 Imaging Materials Symposium, produced by The Tiara Group at May 4-6, 2009, at the Marina del Rey Marriott Hotel in Marina del Rey, California. The event focuses on four key topics in the imaging materials industry--toner, ink jet, media, and sustainability.

Lyra President Charles LeCompte will be the featured keynote speaker at the event's welcome dinner at 7:00 p.m. on May 4. His keynote address, titled, "The Imaging Industry: Trends in Troubled Times," will cover such topics as how supplies power the hard copy business; the three kinds of competition in the hard copy industry (aftermarket, OEM hardware price and OEM cost-per-page); what's going on in China; and the recession and its short- and long-term effects on the industry.

Since 1991, Lyra's custom research and consulting, advisory services, award-winning journals, and innovative events have set the standard for analysis of imaging hardware, consumables, and digital photography markets.

Source: www.lyra.com

Key words: Lyra, event, conference, inks, toner, remanufacturing

Saturday, April 04, 2009

Kodak is back in the game by attacking competitors via its advertising campaign

Last week Kodak started a new advertising campaign meant to upstage its product and undermine competitors’ products. The Wall Street Journal wrote, Eastman Kodak is stepping up the aggressiveness of its marketing as it tries to jump-start its ink-jet-printer business and revive its falling brand.

This week, Kodak started a new ad campaign for the business that taps into consumers' frustration with the high price of printer ink. Its slogan: "Print and Prosper." The “Print and Prosper” campaign, begun in the U.S. and Canada, will use television, newspapers and the Internet to try to convince consumers to switch to Kodak printers, the Rochester, New York-based company said in a statement. Kodak will start marketing in other countries in coming months.

"Last year America paid $5 billion too much for ink-jet-printer ink," one print ad says, while a television spot likens ink to oil. "The world's most expensive liquid isn't found in the Middle East. It is found in ink-jet-printer cartridges," says the spot's voice-over. Eastman Kodak is spending roughly $30 million on the campaign, says a person familiar with the matter.

Since its core film business has faded, the former giant has been trying to remake itself into a digital-photo and printing company, selling consumer ink-jet printers and high-speed commercial presses.

In the past several years, as it struggled to turn itself around, Kodak eliminated tens of thousands of jobs and cut ad spending sharply. Last year, it spent $30.6 million in the U.S. on ad time and space, down from $205.2 million in 2001, according to WPP's TNS Media Intelligence.

The new printer pitch, which will appear in the U.S., Britain and Canada, is the latest from Kodak's new chief marketing officer, Jeff Hayzlett, who was promoted to the post in November. The 48-year-old Mr. Hayzlett has been pushing hard to reshape the conservative brand.

Mr. Hayzlett has abandoned the warm-and-fuzzy branding ads once typical of Kodak. Well-known slogans have included "You push the button -- we do the rest" and "Share moments, share life." Instead, he favors more product-specific ads. "We have to have ads that drive sales," he says.

With the new campaign, Kodak is targeting “high ink- burners,” or people who print a lot, Hayzlett said. The company set up the website www.printandprosper.com, where consumers can calculate the difference in ink costs if they switched to a Kodak printer. Kodak is also using blogs and social-networking sites to spread awareness.

Resuscitating the Kodak brand won't be easy. In 2001, Kodak was ranked the 27th-most-valuable brand in the world, according to Omnicom Group's Interbrand. Last year, it fell off Interbrand's closely followed list of the top 100 global brands. "It's still a highly recognized brand" but "you can't support a great brand without great products," says Jez Frampton, chief executive of Interbrand.

Sources: The Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg.com

Key words: Kodak, printers, ad campaign.

Static Control Components Inc. won the latest round of the battle with Lexmark

The online business source BizJournals announced that Static Control, a world-known manufacturer of high-end supplies for printer cartridges, won a new round in its battle with Lexmark. Essentially, the federal court ruling this week hurts, but does not end, a Lexmark program known as the “prebate.” That program has put a dent into Static Control’s business, which involves making and distributing parts and supplies for remanufacturers of cartridges for printers.

Under terms of the prebate program, Lexmark places restrictions on its printer cartridges. Users agree to buy the cartridges at an up-front discount; in return, they agree to return the empty cartridges to Lexmark. The terms of the deal are placed on the box the cartridge comes in, with users agreeing to abide by the terms by opening the box.

Lexmark says its patents on the cartridges allow it to enforce the terms of the prebate after the cartridges are sold to customers. A federal court in Kentucky had previously agreed.

But on March 31, the court overturned that ruling. The court ruled that the result in a recent Supreme Court case, Quanta Computer Inc. v. LG Electronics Inc., established new case law. The net effect of the Supreme Court ruling, the Kentucky court says, is that Lexmark can no longer claim any patent rights on printer cartridges once they are sold.

The court did rule, however, that state contract law may still apply to the prebate program, which would mean that the program is still legal. Lexmark, based in Kentucky, says it plans to continue the program.

This week’s ruling is just the latest in the battle between Static Control and Lexmark, which has ebbed and flowed like a heavyweight title fight since 2002. Lexmark originally sued Static Control claiming that Static Control products violated the Digital Millennium Copyright Act – a law meant to protect copyrights in the technology world.

Courts disagreed with that assertion, giving a victory to Static Control in the realm of copyright law. But claims concerning patent law and contract law continue to this day.

Source: www.bizjournals.com

Key words: Static Control, Lexmark, patent rights, prebate.