doesn't help that printer ink is one of the most expensive liquids in the world and the whole business model of printer companies is based on selling overpriced ink, so much so that they sell printers at a loss and then try to block out third party cartridges
Memes
Rules:
- Be civil and nice.
- Try not to excessively repost, as a rule of thumb, wait at least 2 months to do it if you have to.
That's why i just buy a new printer each time. Fuck them
The sad thing is that’s basically what they encourage. So wasteful. Because they want you on a subscription model.
That's playing into the system. Buy a decent laser printer and be done.
Fuck my printer ink is like $20 for 3 of all 4 colors and the larger black cartridge it has. I love my Canon.
I tossed my Canon ink printer in the trash lol.
it started with low on cyan, so I did what it asked for and replaced the whole ink set, but then found out that the previous ink has dried on the ink tuner since I haven't used the printer for ~6 months and didn't feel like spending any more money on this shit.
So I got my myself a laser brother printer and it's been kicking for over 6 years now
buy a Brother, or better yet a laser printer.
I'll only buy Brother printers now. The print quality is pretty good and they just work on my Linux desktop.
Even scanning over the network works on Linux on my Brother MFP. I really didn't expect that.
I was in the market this year so shopping around laser color ones I noticed the reviews for even the Brother said it would brick your printer if you use 3rd party toners. So just look before you buy. I ended up buying their more expensive one because of that, but still not entirely sure its 3rd party compatible. Ill research whether thats the case when my toner needs replaced.
I have a brother laser printer. Best printer I’ve had so far. 3 years on the same toner cart; at my pace I’d have replaced the ink 2 or 3 times already.
Obligatory "buy a Brother B&W laser printer" comment
They're actually more economical than modern HP printers because of their anti-consumer BS.
I got a used brother that had ever only printed one toner cartridges worth of prints, for 15€. It even has wifi, definitely one of the better buys I've made. I only need to print a handful of times a year so I anticipate it'll last me for years and years.
My color brother laser is great. I needed color but either option is the better one
They have to print the invisible printer identification dots somehow.
huh
Printers print very small dots on the sheet of paper you print so it canbe identified. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Machine_Identification_Code
TIL
Who needs color anyway? A black laser printer is the way to go :)
Yeah. The vast majority of people have no real reason to own a color printer. Black and white laser does the job and only if you need to print something like photos at home, should you even consider an inkjet.
Even then it depends how many you want to print.
Often will work out cheaper to have somebody else print them and post them to you.
Low on cyan!!1!
I have a b&w laster printer, an old Kyocera relic from the mid-2000s. Got it from a previous job that was remodeling their offices. I refuse to let go of it, I don't care how many brown-outs it causes when I'm printing something (seriously, it dims the lights when it fires up).
I'll only replace it with an equally beefy color laser printer.
My Brother monochromatic printing ~3000 pages per cartridge going brrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
I will never not tell people how my old HP still works on cheap refills. HP will never see another dime from me.
They were once capable.
My Canon wouldn't scan a document to store on my PC because I was out of yellow ink
I haven't given them another cent and it's been 15 years. Fuck you Canon. Fuck you HP
The last printer I bought was a shitty $80 Samsung Laser Printer that still works on its original toner after 10 years. The print quality is terrible but it’s still the best deal I ever had on a printer.
I just buy a new printer each time it runs out of ink
Probably cheaper in the long-run lol
The cartridges that come with printers are reduced volume.
When you lack black ink, the printer judt grabs the other colors until it makes black. Wich is kind of annoying since it's the cheapest toner.
And that isn't even getting into their drivers and software. Foolish me bought a printer with a scanner and thought I'd be able to just install one little piece of software and be able to print and scan. How silly of me to forget that I to search Google to find instructions that weren't provided by HP, and download an application that the printer's instructions did not tell me to install, in order to get the it working.
I almost want this printer to die just so I can never own an HP printer again in my life.
If you use Windows, you can just do the following:
- Go to the control panel, then devices and printers.
- Right click on your printer, but make sure it is connected first.
- You should be able to see "Scan" as one of the options, click on it.
And you're done! You do not need any special programs or anything like that because Windows already has a built-in one.
I always like when I have to open their installer executbale in a utility like 7zip (beause they are 99% really just a self-extracting archive like zip with the actual installer inside), yank out the driver and INF files so i dont have to install some call-home telemetry nonsense to be able to print.
As somebody who didn’t, for once, have this specific problem today, but had a printing problem nonetheless, I feel so triggered by this post.
Why the actual fuck is printing so much harder today than it was a decade ago. I feel like I’m taking crazy pills that we are halfway through 2023 and I have more printing issues than I did even 4-5 years ago, let alone back in the golden days of literally never having printing issues in the first half of my lifetime.
MAGENTA!!!!
This is not only HP my old Epson too. Now my Xerox laser try to print even if no more toner inside 😅
What does HP stand for? I think this post isn't related to health points or Harry Potter.
Hewlett Packard
HP is a brand that makes printers. But more recently they've started moving into the ink / ink subscription business.
Or it maybe stands for HungryPhrog????
Horrible Products