Friday, May 29, 2009

IBM and Ricoh come up with a new printer

InfoPrint, a joint venture of IBM and Ricoh, launched a new series of color printer with enhanced sustainability features. The new series of printers features standard duplex printing meant to reduce the amount of paper waste.

The new ColorCare technology used in the printers will help control color access and per-copy costs. Run in eco-mode, energy consumption is reduced while the printers are in standby. The printers are designed to be used by small companies and middle work groups.

Key words: IBM, Ricoh

Saturday, May 16, 2009

Lexmark is restarting its operations in India

There have been 3 years since the moment Lexmark stopped its operations in India. Now the company intends to restart its operations in the country. The India operations will be headed by Kumar P Ranjan who has been appointed as Country Manager—Solutions and Services, and the launch of the operations is planned for June from Mumbai.

Key words: Lexmark, India

HP is attacking the aftermarket with new market research data

HP has announced the results of a report produced by Quality Logic Inc. (ordered again by HP), which revealed that, presumably, the use of remanufactured cartridges incur twice as much troubles for laser printers in total costs than if the printers are on original cartridges.

The independent testing laboratory Quality Logic Inc. lead a study in the Asia Pacific region to compare the total amount of costs necessary to properly use a laser cartridge. The tester presented the data coming from 2500 small businesses in the region, which includes all information about reliability and page quality.

According to the results of the testing company 1 in 4 of all remanufactured cartridges failed to produce good quality prints and only 1 in 3 pages printed on a remanufactured was acceptable for use.

According to an HP representative in Thailand, small and medium businesses can see immediate cut in expense with remanufactured cartridges, but in the long run the difference will be quickly eroded and customers will incur twice as much costs on maintenance and repairs.

Quality Logic Inc. tested the cartridge reliability and page quality distribution of HP LaserJet toner cartridges for the HP LaserJet 2300 and HP LaserJet 4350 printers. The final outcome of this study is:

> 9.7% of remanufactured cartridges failed prematurely.
> 15.3% had 50% or more pages of limited or no use.
> 25.3% of prints on remanufactured cartridges were of limited use : not for external distribution.
> 3.8% of prints on remanufactured cartridges were of limited use: not for use at all.

RechargEast: This first study in the region ordered and sponsored by HP revealed just exactly what the ordering company wanted to hear and deliver to the local markets. Unfortunately, the study does not give concrete details as to the criteria, print-environment conditions and the state of printing devices as well as all other important factors for a test. The study does not give any information about the brands of the used remanufactured cartridges. Neither is there any information whether remanufactured cartridges were just refilled or remanufactured ones. All these gaps can only prompt to the fact, that the study is a tool to be used in the harsh competition war on the market of imaging supplies, which HP is gradually losing in Asia to the aftermarket.

Probably, the economic crisis, falling demand and increased prices for OEm cartridges in the region made the US printer giant look for some other means to sway the local public's attention from cheaper aftermarket products.

Key words: HP, remanufactured, cartridges, aftermarket, Asia

Xerox goes greener with its ColorQube 9200

Xerox announced the release of its new top-notch multifunctional printer ColorQube 9200, which is said to reduce waste by 90%.

Last week the US printer manufacturer unveiled its new ColorQube 9200 printer, which embodies a set of new technologies meant to reduce waste, cut energy consumption and save on supplies.

The new device is based on solid ink technology. The company says the technology is the key factor to cut on waste as the ColorQube 9200 would print more than 55,000 pages on a single block of ink.


Xerox also points out that the use of this saving technology will allow to use 9% less energy and produce 10% fewer greenhouse gases throughout the machine's lifespan as compared with similar laser printers.

The ColorQube 9200 is another product in Xerox's initiative to go green. The company has already announced the energy-efficient toner and a couple of eco-friendly technologies patented.

The new ColorQube 9200 is available already in North America. But it targets small printing companies with the price of around $23,000. The launch date for Europe is planned for September, 2009.

Key words: Xerox, green, multifunctional, printer, environment

New WorkForce 310 from Epson

Epson introduced the WorkForce 310 ink jet all-in-one printer, which is compatible with Macs and PCs.

The new MFU designed for small and medium businesses has a built-in Ethernet port and has five individual high-capacity cartridges that use DuraBrite pigment-based ink. Epson also states that the printer uses up to 70 percent less power than a laser printer.

The WorkForce 310 prints 16 ppm in black and 5 ppm in color. The device is equipped with a 30-page automatic document feeder for faxing, copying or scanning. The MFU can fax in black-and-white and in color.

The WorkForce 310 is compatible with Mac OS X 10.3.9 or later.

According to the company's press release, the printer will be available in June for the recommended price of $130.

Key words: Epson, printers, new, inkjet

Sunday, May 10, 2009

RechargEast Magazine, MAY'09 issue


READ IN THE MAY'09 ISSUE:

» Remanufacturing the Samsung CLP-610 Toner Cartridge
» Toshiba MJ-1015 MJ-1016 Finishers – Let’s “FINISH” The Copy/Print Job (part VIII)

» "Don't Throw. Make It Valuable", - says LVL from France

» To End All Wars...In the Imaging Industry
» A Big Country, a Big Market, Huge Perspectives...But Not that Quick Now!
» Marketing and Selling Your Product and Service in a Recession
» HP Managed Print Services

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

Download the MAY'09 issue.


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

Sancon from China to expand its recycling capabilities

The Chinese company Sancon, a local environmental services and waste recycling company, announced that it inked an agreement with Close the Loop Limited to form a joint venture with the purpose of setting up a state-of-the-art 6,000 square meters facility which will recycle toner and inkjet cartridges with zero waste to landfill, and return the raw materials back to the original manufacturer for reuse in new printers and cartridges.

China currently consumes over 100 million printer cartridges on an annual basis. Sancon will consolidate the results of the joint venture under GAAP. Close the Loop has successfully operated a similar Facility in Australia.

Close the Loop is widely recognized in Australia for its ability to efficiently and cost-effectively process all-in-one toner cartridges, ink jets, toner bottles, drum units, fuser assemblies and other waste. It works closely with some of the top printer cartridge makers in the world, and counts IBM, HP, Epson, Brother, Cannon, Toshiba amongst its partners and clients.

Source: www.sanconinc.com

Key words: cartridge recycling, inks, toner, China

Epson and Apple to pair up to produce a new app for printing

By friending up and releasing a new mutually compatible application, Epson and Apple offer users of Apple iPhone and iPod Touch devices the possibility of printing photos and documents from Epson printers using the new EuroSmartz, Ltd. Print & Share application.

The application, available for $6.99 on iTunes' app store, will allow an iPhone or iPod Touch to connect to a Epson printer either through a USB cable or over a network. The printed material ranges from business documents and emails to photos and PDF files.
The partnership between Epson and Apple opens up a new section of the mobile printing industry and the print application is available now.

Source: www.printercomparison.com

Key words: Epson, Apple, partnership

Xerox is back on the track with its solid ink technology

According to New York Times, Xerox is planning to breathe life in its solid ink printers by adding high-volume color printers to its product list by the end of this spring. After years of research, Xerox will release the first in a new series of large machines this month that it claims will change the economics of printing large volumes of color documents at offices.

Unlike traditional laser printers that use cartridges of powdery, sometimes messy toner, the revamped products rely on hunks of ink that remain solid at room temperature and then melt when heated.

“This is something they have been working on for forever and a day,” said Brian Bissett, the editor of the MFP Report, a publication about office printers and copiers. “It does have the potential to be fairly important.”
Traditionally, printer makers have charged big corporate customers a per-page fee for printing services: up to 8 cents a page for a color document and less than 2 cents a page for black-and-white.

Xerox and its main competitors, Canon and Ricoh, typically bill customers for a color page if there is any pigment on it, whether it’s a full-color replica of a slide from a presentation or a page that just has a colorful company logo and mostly black text.
Because of the higher cost, only about 15 percent of the more than two trillion documents printed every year in offices worldwide use color.

“This isn’t because people don’t like color but because there have been lots of barriers to color,” said Ursula M. Burns, the president of Xerox. “The last barrier is that it’s expensive.”

With its new ColorQube solid ink systems, Xerox says it can pull the average cost of color documents down to about 3 cents a page. A portion of the price break comes from better tracking of how much color is used on a page. But the principal breakthrough with the solid ink technology stems from the overall simplicity of the machine’s innards. Solid ink machines need about one-third as many parts as laser printers, which require various mechanisms to fuse toner onto paper that must be replaced over time, adding materials and services costs.

And instead of putting clunky cartridges of toner into the printers, customers just pop in the sticks of ink. Once that ink runs out, another stick goes in, and there’s nothing that needs to be thrown away or recycled. Over all, Xerox claims that it takes about 272 pounds of material to produce one million pages with a solid ink machine versus 965 pounds of material with a competing laser product.

Source: www.nytimes.com

Key words: Xerox, solid inks, large-scale printers

HP says there will be no more drivers for printers

ZDNet has informed that HP has radical plans for the future of consumer printing, promising an end to printer drivers and the introduction of devices that just do not care at all what the user's platform is: Windows, Linux, iPhone or anything else.

According to HP's representatives there's a significant move to authoring and editing digital content. This trend offers new business opportunities for HP to develop a new way of printing. The company describes its idea as follows. The user takes his printer home from the store and plugs it into the network. The printer is registered with HP's servers over the Internet. When the user starts printing the information is sent to the servers and those send the output to the printer. In the end it will not matter much what the working tool is (iPhone or a laptop), it's a Web service and users will print provided they have connection to the Internet. This is the basis of the so-called cloud printing process developed by HP.

HP gives the possibility to print from BlackBerry

Cloud printing will be used in printing from BlackBerries. HP and Research In Motion (RIM) announced they are establishing a strategic alliance to deliver a portfolio of solutions for business mobility on the BlackBerry® platform.

HP will soon be demonstrating two new solutions – HP CloudPrint for BlackBerry® smartphones and HP Operations Manager for BlackBerry Enterprise Server.

HP CloudPrint for BlackBerry smartphones is a web services based solution that allows users to print emails, documents, photos and web pages using a BlackBerry smartphone, wherever they are – in the office, at home or on the road.

The CloudPrint service enables mobile users to easily print to the nearest printer. The service is printer-agnostic and driverless and requires simple Internet access. HP and RIM plan to make CloudPrint available to BlackBerry Internet Service subscribers as well as BlackBerry Enterprise Server customers.

So, the first step is made to offer cloud printing to the market. We just need to see whether this new type of printing will be accepted or not by users.

Key words: BlackBerry, HP, cloud printing, partnership

Thursday, May 07, 2009

Remax 2009

In the end of April a new edition of Remax took place. Here are some opinions of its participant.

First reaction to Remax 09 from Recycler on Vimeo.

Friday, May 01, 2009

Brazilian PC market is table, printers suffer

The Brazilian PC market decreased 23% in unit terms in February 2009 compared to the previous month. Desktops and notebooks declined by 27% and 13% respectively. Nevertheless, in comparison to the same month in 2008, the market in volume terms remained almost identical.

In February 2009 the Printers market decreased 28% in sales units compared to the same period of the previous year, but compared to January 2009 it remained stable. The Laser Printers market share increased 63% compared to September 2008, which represents a 75% increase in value. Inkjet printers continued to be the most popular printer type, maintaining a share of around 70% for the last 6 months.

Source: www.gfkrt.com

Key words: Brazil, printers

Canon opens a new cartridge-manufacturing plant

On May 1, Canon opened a new $640 million cartridge-manufacturing facility in Oyster Point, Virginia, USA, that will bring 1,000 jobs to the region by 2013.

The 700,000-square-foot building is finished but will not start operations until the end of the year or early 2010, Rhonda Bunn, a spokeswoman for Canon Virginia, said Thursday. Equipment will be installed from May to October and then tested for several weeks, she said.

Canon, she said, promised to hire 1,000 workers for the facility by 2013. It already has hired 250. Canon has been in Newport News for 23 years and employed about 1,500 people before the expansion.

The printing company chose Newport News for the expansion because "Canon wants to build products in the region near the consumer," Bunn said.

The laser-cartridge facility is the largest piece of Canon Virginia's expansion, one of the state's biggest economic-development coups in recent years.

Source: www.hamptonroads.com

Key words: Canon, plant, cartridge manufacturing

Canon’s fall in profit

Japan's Canon reported an 88 percent fall in quarterly profit, hit by slumping demand for copiers and printers. Demand for office machines and their supplies such as toner cartridges remained weak as the global financial crisis made the replacement cycle of copiers and printers longer and prompted corporate clients not to use them as heavily as before.

Canon, whose other competitors include Xerox and Ricoh, earlier this month delayed the construction of a toner cartridge components plant in western Japan for a second time, underscoring weak demand.
But Canon's overseas sales have been boosted by softer-than-expected yen. The company also said it would aim to cut 172 billion yen in costs this year, 60 billion yen more than originally planned.

Source: www.reuters.com

Key words: Canon, market, profit, crisis