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Canon PIXMA iP3600
Infos Tinte Farbdrucker, Unters. Fromatgrößen, 9600 , Duplexdruck Nein, USB
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Empfehlung von AlaTest DE vom 2012-02-05 00:00:00.0
Zusammenfassung der Testberichte für Canon PIXMA iP3600
alaTest hat 657 Testberichte und Meinungen für Canon PIXMA iP3600 analysiert. Durchschnittliche Expertenbewertung: 77/100, und durchschnittliche Verbrauchermeinungen: 82/100. Im Vergleich zu 342.208 Testberichten von anderen Drucker ergibt sich daher ein alaScore von 73/100 = Gut.
…mehr Canon PIXMA iP3600 Testberichte
Empfehlung von Testseek DE vom 2010-06-27 00:00:00.0
Canon Pixma iP3600
Testseek.de hat 14 Expertenmeinungen über Canon Pixma iP3600 eingeholt. Das duchschnittliche Epertenrating ist 79 von 100. Die durchschnittlich erreichte Punktezahl gibt die Meinung der Expertencommunity über das Produkt wieder. Klicken Sie unten und nutzen Sie Testseek um alle Beurteilungen, Produktauszeichnungen und Schlussfolgerungen sehen zu können.
Empfehlung von TrustedReviews vom 2010-06-27 00:00:00.0
Canon PIXMA iP3600
The Canon PIXMA iP3600 is a good, general-purpose, home inkjet printer, with a strong line in photo printing and reasonable plain paper output, too. Running costs are no more than other machines in the same price range and the twin paper sources are an advantage if you want to load plain paper and photo blanks at the same time. It's a little bit sluggish starting to print and a wireless connection could have been handy, but overall you won't go far wrong with the PIXMA iP3600.
A no-frills inkjet printer with two paper sources, good print quality and separate ink cartridges.
Empfehlung von Techradar vom 2009-09-16 00:00:00.0
Canon PIXMA iP3600
Canon has enjoyed so much success with the groundbreaking five-ink system in printers such as the iP3600. Introduced a few years ago, it no longer makes any conventional 6-ink photo printers, featuring additional light cyan and light magenta inks. The so-called ContrastPLUS ink line-up includes both pigment-based and dye-based black inks, along with dye-based cyan, magenta and yellow. This results in excellent quality and speedy efficiency for both regular document printing and for high-quality photo printing, removing the need to run two printers. The iP3600 is Canon's latest entry-level, bare-bones 5-ink printer with no LCD or memory card slots but it uses the new generation of ChromaLife 100+ cartridges and paper. As well as increased fade-resistance, the new system aims to deliver increased vibrancy, greater colour range and deeper blacks. The downside is that Canon has reduced the capacity of its ink cartridges without any drop in prices, effectively raising ink costs by about 75 per cent compared with previous generations. Overall running costs are now roughly on a par with most other manufacturers, rather than offering a bargain. The iP3600 is no slouch although its print speed lags behind the more expensive iP4600.Follow TechRadar Reviews on Twitter: http://twitter.com/techradarreview
Empfehlung von whatlaptop.co.uk vom 2009-09-16 00:00:00.0
Canon PIXMA iP3600
Canon has enjoyed so much success with the groundbreaking five-ink system in printers such as the iP3600. Introduced a few years ago, it no longer makes any conventional 6-ink photo printers, featuring additional light cyan and light magenta inks.
Empfehlung von PC Advisor vom 2009-02-24 00:00:00.0
Canon Pixma iP3600 review
The Canon Pixma iP3600 may be basic, but it gets the basics right. It's fast and turns out beautiful prints that leave many of its rivals standing.
If Darth Vader was buying a photo printer, the £70 Canon Pixma iP3600 would be near the top of his shortlist. He'd certainly appreciate the acres of black shiny?
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Canon Pixma iX6550
Infos Tinte Farbdrucker, Unters. Fromatgrößen, 9600 dpi, Duplexdruck Nein, USB 2.0
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Empfehlung von AlaTest DE vom 2012-02-05 00:00:00.0
Zusammenfassung der Testberichte für Canon PIXMA iX6550
alaTest hat 89 Testberichte und Meinungen für Canon PIXMA iX6550 analysiert. Durchschnittliche Expertenbewertung: 80/100, und durchschnittliche Verbrauchermeinungen: 88/100. Im Vergleich zu 342.208 Testberichten von anderen Drucker ergibt sich daher ein alaScore von 95/100 = Ausgezeichnet.
…mehr Canon Pixma iX6550 Testberichte
Empfehlung von Testseek DE vom 2011-11-11 00:00:00.0
Canon Pixma iX6550
Testseek.de hat 16 Expertenmeinungen über Canon Pixma iX6550 eingeholt. Das duchschnittliche Epertenrating ist 79 von 100. Die durchschnittlich erreichte Punktezahl gibt die Meinung der Expertencommunity über das Produkt wieder. Klicken Sie unten und nutzen Sie Testseek um alle Beurteilungen, Produktauszeichnungen und Schlussfolgerungen sehen zu können.
Empfehlung von Macworld UK vom 2011-09-07 00:00:00.0
Canon PIXMA iX6550 review
Canon's PIXMA iX6550 inkjet printer doesn't have a scanner, copier, automatic document feeder, auto-duplex or any other complicated circuitry to confuse you ? all it does is print documents and photos from the tiny 6x4in size all the way to A3+.
Empfehlung von PC Advisor vom 2011-09-06 00:00:00.0
Canon PIXMA iX6550 review
Canon's iX6550 is a good general-purpose A3 printer for any office or home user who just needs reasonable print quality and doesn't mind the restriction of USB-only connectivity.
Canon's PIXMA iX6550 inkjet printer doesn't have a scanner, copier, automatic document feeder, auto-duplex or any other complicated circuitry to confuse you ? all it?
Empfehlung von CNET.co.uk vom 2011-07-12 00:00:00.0
Canon Pixma iX6550
Canon's Pixma iX6550 is one of an increasing number of medium-format printers on the market that allows you to print to A3 while remaining relatively affordable, as it can be bought online for around £160. Compact, for an A3 printer To be able to accept A3 sheets of paper, the Canon iX6550 obviously has to be larger than your average inkjet printer. It's certainly quite wide measuring 549mm, but it's not all that tall and deep, at least when the paper trays aren?t pulled out. With the trays, which can accept up to 150 sheets, fully extended for use with A3 sheets, the footprint does become quite large. However, the trays are telescopic so you don?t have to have them pulled all the way out if you're not using those larger sheets, which helps save a bit on space. Like a lot of models targeted at home users, Canon has given the top of the printer a glossy finish, which initially looks quite appealing. Unfortunately, though, it really does show up fingerprints quite badly, so with a lot of use can quickly start to look a bit grubby. Around the sides, the chassis is finished in matte plastic, which is easier to keep clean. This model doesn't have any networking support, so the only way to connect it to your computer is via USB. Unfortunately there's no other USB port, so the printer doesn't support PictBridge for direct printing from a digital camera. It also lacks memory card slots, which perhaps isn't surprising as there's no LCD screen either. In fact, the only controls on the front are a power button and a cancel button ? all other settings are controlled via the printer's driver software on your computer. The iX6550 uses five cartridges, as it has an extra black cartridge that's used for photo printing. Installing the printhead and cartridges is pretty straightforward, as when you lift the cover the mechanism moves to the centre to give you easy access. The iX6550 uses five cartridges. There's a standard black cartridge for black and white printing, along with individual cyan, magenta and yellow, plus an extra black cartridge to provide deeper more contrast-y black levels when printing photos. The A3 printing is the key selling point of this model, but it can work with sheet sizes all the way down to 15x10 cm, with borderless printing supported across all sizes. The maximum print resolution is also high at 9,600 dpi. Rich, clean colours When it comes to print speed the iX6550 isn?t a bad performer. Pre-processing, the time between clicking print on your computer and the printer actually kicking into life, was generally around 10 to 12 seconds for each document. It managed to print the ten pages of our black and white text document in one minute and four seconds and it took two minutes and 17 seconds to deliver our ten-page business presentation in colour. Printing ten copies of our colour graphics test document on the other hand took two minutes and 38 seconds. All these results are relatively fast speeds for an inkjet model. It was no slouch when it came to photo printing either, as it spewed out a single copy of our 4x6-inch test photo in one minute and three seconds. Print quality is generally pretty good, although printed text did have a slight amount of bleed here and there and was not as clean as what you'll get from a laser printer. Where this model really excels, though, is in colour graphics and photo printing. Not only is it quick, but it also produces rich, clean colours with none of the speckling or banding that you sometimes see on lesser models. Print costs for a black A4 page work out at about 3.59p including paper, which is a little on the high side, but a colour A4 page works out at around 9.34p per page which is slightly better than average. Conclusion If you need A3 printouts then the Canon Pixma iX6550 is a pretty decent option mainly due to its fairly speedy output and the high quality results it produces. However, given the lack of extras such as Wi-Fi and PictBridge support, it seems a bit pricey next to the competition. For example, the Brother DCP-6690CW offers more features, including a Wi-Fi, a touchscreen, PictBridge and memory cards slots for a similar outlay. That said, that model is a bit slow and doesn't produce as good results as the Canon.
You'll find more features available on competitors' similarly priced models, but if you value print quality and speed over extra bells and whistles then the Pixma iX6550 is definitely worth consideration.
Empfehlung von TrustedReviews vom 2011-05-17 00:00:00.0
Canon PIXMA iX6550
If you need larger print on a regular basis, but have limited resources, Canon's PIXMA iX6550 is a good choice. It's print quality is up with other Canon printers and while its feature set is basic, it prints reasonably quickly, particularly when producing photos, and is as at home printing smaller paper sizes as when you take it up to A3+.
An A3+ printer which doesn't cost the earth to buy and produces high quality images at good print speeds, particularly when printing photos.
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Canon Selphy CP800
Infos Tinte Farbdrucker, Foto, 300 dpi, Duplexdruck Nein, USB
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Empfehlung von AlaTest DE vom 2012-02-05 00:00:00.0
Zusammenfassung der Testberichte für Canon Selphy CP800
alaTest hat 402 Testberichte und Meinungen für Canon Selphy CP800 analysiert. Durchschnittliche Expertenbewertung: 73/100, und durchschnittliche Verbrauchermeinungen: 81/100. Im Vergleich zu 342.208 Testberichten von anderen Drucker ergibt sich daher ein alaScore von 85/100 = Sehr Gut.
…mehr Canon Selphy CP800 Testberichte
Empfehlung von Testseek DE vom 2011-11-07 00:00:00.0
Canon Selphy CP800
Testseek.de hat 19 Expertenmeinungen über Canon Selphy CP800 eingeholt. Das duchschnittliche Epertenrating ist 72 von 100. Die durchschnittlich erreichte Punktezahl gibt die Meinung der Expertencommunity über das Produkt wieder. Klicken Sie unten und nutzen Sie Testseek um alle Beurteilungen, Produktauszeichnungen und Schlussfolgerungen sehen zu können.
Empfehlung von PhotoRadar vom 2011-11-07 00:00:00.0
Canon Selphy CP800
The Canon Selphy CP800 is a compact dye-sub 6x4 printer, offering the basic functionality we'd expect for its £80 price tag. This includes a 2.5-inch LCD screen and a range of card slots, as well as a USB port for flash drives and another for connecting a computer.
Empfehlung von whatlaptop.co.uk vom 2011-11-07 00:00:00.0
Canon Selphy CP800
The Canon Selphy CP800 is a compact dye-sub 6x4 printer, offering the basic functionality we'd expect for its £80 price tag. This includes a 2.5-inch LCD screen and a range of card slots, as well as a USB port for flash drives and another for connecting a computer.
Empfehlung von Computer Shopper vom 2011-03-25 00:00:00.0
Canon Selphy CP800
This low-cost, portable snapshot printer offers excellent image quality and respectable print times, but take note if you'll use it often: Its pricey consumables could negate the savings.
Dedicated snapshot photo printers can be a tricky sell, being that they are all about convenience over cost. We have yet to see a snapshot printer with a cost per print lower than you'll get at your local drug-store kiosk. But with one of these usually portable printers, there's no waiting involved. In most instances, you can go from taking a photo to having a print in a matter of minutes. But the cost-vs.-convenience factor means that every snapshot printer has to offer something special to entice buyers. For some, it's portability. For others, it's a snazzy LCD that doubles as a digital photo frame. For the $99 Canon Selphy CP800, the benefit is two-fold. It's one of the least-expensive snapshot printers we've reviewed recently, and it churns out some of the best prints we've seen. In the CP800, you'll find some excellent features that aren't requisite on every photo printer, including an array of memory-card readers and an excellent tilt-up LCD for previewing images. Be aware, though, that due to its budget price, you'll have to pay extra for some add-on features, and, as is the case with most snapshot printers, you'll pay a premium for your prints. But amateur photographers who like their snapshot photos quickly and on the go will want to seriously consider the CP800. Physically, the CP800 is an unprepossessing matte-black box, just 4.7 inches wide by 2.3 inches high by 6.7 inches deep. (Factor in another 6 inches in front when the paper holder is inserted, plus 5 inches of clearance in back for the paper-feed motion.) It weighs 2.5 pounds, plus another 13 ounces for the A/C adapter, and it feels reassuringly solid without being bulky. With the paper cassette detached, the display can lay flat, and the paper "door" folds up, making it compact enough for travel. On the left side of the front face, you'll find the memory-card readers. Format support is wide: SD/MultiMediaCard, Memory Stick/Memory Stick Duo, and CompactFlash. On the left side of the printer are a USB 2.0 port for plugging in flash drives and other USB storage, and a second USB interface for connecting to the host computer. Paper goes in a clear-plastic paper cassette that inserts into the front of the printer. Completed prints exit from the rear. You can print two different sizes of photo on the CP800: 2x3.5 inches and 4x6 inches. The Selphy CP800 has a 2.5-inch LCD for image preview and settings navigation. It comes folded flat, and you can tilt it up by about 45 degrees. When printing a photo, the LCD shows the image, as well as a column of status icons, showing which slot has media, whether red-eye reduction is turned on, and the like. Along the bottom, it shows paper size and the number of copies requested. Control buttons are located under the LCD. They are about a half-inch in diameter, easy to press, and well-labeled, with large-font text and an icon. From left to right, the control buttons are On (and off), Menu, OK, Back, and Print. The OK button has directional-arrow controls around it. When viewing media contents, the left/right arrow tabs provide inter-image navigation; the up/down arrows let you select the number of copies. The control panel is easy to use, with each button having a clear, specific function. You configure the CP800 by bringing up the menu on the LCD. (As you'd guess, the Menu button summons it.) You set or change printer and print options with the arrow/OK keys. Default settings include the operating language as English, and shooting dates not being printed onto the photos. Other configuration options include image optimization and red-eye correction. You can also select thumbnail printing if you'd like to create miniature reference or "index" prints, putting two, four, or eight images on a single page. Setup was delightfully simple and quick. Inserting the ink cartridge was easy?just open the plastic flap on the right side of the unit, push it in, and close the flap. Loading paper into the cassette, and the cassette into the machine, took a few more seconds of examination; we had to sort out that the top clear flap of the paper holder is supposed to be open during printing. When we inserted a USB flash drive, and, separately, an SD card, the printer quickly and easily found the images. All we had to do was use the left and right arrows to scroll to the desired image, poke the up/down arrows to select the number of copies, and hit the Print button. Because the Selphy uses dye-sublimation technology to print (as opposed to more-common inkjet printing), it features the 300x300dpi resolution and 256 levels of color typical of snapshot printers that use this technology. In dye-sublimation printing, the printer transfers ink onto the paper from a continuous sheet of ink-impregnated film contained in the cassette; inkjets, in contrast, spray microjets of liquid ink onto the page from a reservoir. A plus for dye-sub: The cartridge also applies a protective coating to each photograph, making the prints reasonably resistant to water and scratches. The dye-sublimation transfer roll comes encased in a single two-barrel cartridge, which inserts easily via a pull-down door on the printer's right side. (The barrels are connected, about 2 inches apart; inside them, fresh, ink-packed film feeds from one roll onto a takeup roll as it is used.) When in action, the Selphy prints a picture in passes, pushing the paper out the back and pulling it back in again with each color it lays on. As a result, allowing adequate clearance behind the printer is not optional when it's printing. Canon includes a CD-ROM full of photo software, letting you print directly from your computer and do some image management. If your digital camera supports PictBridge, you can also connect it to the Selphy CP800 directly. Canon also offers its Bluetooth BU-30 adapter ($49.99), which lets you print directly from a Bluetooth-enabled mobile phone, and an optional rechargeable battery pack ($79.99), which is good for up to about 54 postcard-size prints, according to the manual. We didn't get the opportunity to test the battery's longevity, but it should allow for at least limited printing when you're away from a power plug. As you can see, though the printer itself doesn't cost a whole lot, the extras can add up. In addition, the cost of consumables for this printer is high. Canon offers both standard-capacity and high-capacity photo packs, but either way, the output is pricey. A 4x6-inch photo (paper and ink cartridge) ranges from about 32 to 42 cents per print, depending on the refill-pack capacity you buy. That's more than the average photo kiosk or local photo/drug-store service charges. (And that assumes you aren't wasting the Selphy's consumables by making prints you don't like?some stores won't charge for duds.) It's also slightly higher than other competing snapshot photo printers, including the Sony DPP-F770 (29 cents) and the Epson PictureMate Charm (25 cents). Bear in mind with dye-sub consumables, however, that the photo paper?enough for the ink rolls that are included?comes in the package. So the cost per print, in the case of this model, factors in the paper, too. The printing cost is a touchy trade-off. Now that very good photo-inkjet all-in-one printers are dropping well below $100, you can get a lot more printer capability for your money by going that route, but you'd sacrifice the portability of a snapshot printer like the Selphy. Another option, of course, is ordering your prints locally, but you'll have to pick them up from your local store, and you're at the whim of their operating hours. Operating this printer is straightforward. The Selphy CP800 takes around 15 seconds to start up and ready itself for printing. Printing a 4x6-inch image takes about 45 seconds when printing from a memory card, and about a minute seconds when printing from a PC. There is only one quality mode, and apparently nothing happens, at least mechanically, for the first half of the printing time. Then the paper shuttles back and forth through the front and back of the printer, until it slides out the front, ready to be admired. These printing times are fast compared with those of other snapshot printers we've tested, including the Canon Selphy ES40 (which took 80 seconds each to print test images from a memory card). It's a bit closer to the Epson PictureMate Charm (50 seconds from a memory card). It's also a polite performer; the machine makes some whirring noises of the grade and volume of an electric can opener. You could use it all day (given enough ink cartridges and paper) without offending your ears. More important, though, the prints look simply outstanding?even better than anything we recall getting from a photo-store kiosk. Canon's marketing claim is that the Selphy produces "brilliantly colored, long-lasting photos that rival the appearance and durability of images created by a professional photo lab." They'll get no argument from us on the color claim. Plus, as we mentioned, the printing process finishes by adding a clear protective coating, to help prevent damage from light, water, or gases. A test print didn't smudge when we rubbed a wet finger over it, but we haven't had the months or years to test endurance. The Selphy CP800 is an easy-to-use option for individuals, families, businesses, and organizations that need occasional high-quality photo output at snapshot sizes. This portable printer could be useful for bringing to parties (instant gratification!), sporting events, contests, and business events where you have a table or booth. Indeed, it's useful in many of the scenarios where you would once have used a Polaroid instant-photo camera. (All that hinges, of course, on buying that extra battery pack.) Ditto for mobile professionals like real-estate agents and first responders, plus fishing enthusiasts, artists...it's easy to conjure up lots of jobs and situations where high-quality mobile printing could be useful. Our suggestion: Try one in a store to get a sense of the size, weight, speed?and see the amazing prints. Then you'll know if it's worth considering one. Caveats? The consumables cost is at the minimum annoying, and at the most daunting. You can find other snapshot printers with a lower cost per print, but you'll pay more up front for them. Plus, because of the Selphy's low initial price, you'll pay extra for its Bluetooth capabilities and battery, features that are included on some pricier models. But if what you're looking for is affordable, under-a-minute photo printing that you can carry around in a tote bag, the Canon Selphy CP800 fits the bill.
Empfehlung von PCWorld.com vom 2011-01-19 00:00:00.0
Canon Selphy CP800
The nice photos that the CP800 produces are overshadowed by the pricey, wasteful consumables it uses to create them.
The Canon Selphy CP800 snapshot printer is inexpensive ($100 as of December 15, 2010), and it does a generally nice job of printing photos. Watching the machine's dye-sublimation technology in action is interesting, too: It applies ink from a continuous plastic sheet in three passes--one for each color--and then applies a clear coat on the fourth pass. You can see the photo paper peek out of the printer during each pass; it's almost like watching your photo develop. Regrettably, this printer's somewhat poky speed and its expensive, wasteful consumables overshadow its fun aspects. Setting up the Selphy CP800 is easy enough, but we had to read the documentation to figure out that we needed to flip back the top of the 18-sheet input cassette for it to fit into the printer. The flipped lid creates an output tray for holding a small number of photos--clever, but not entirely intuitive. Beyond that, the tilt-up 2.5-inch LCD provides all the feedback you need to print directly from the CompactFlash, MultiMediaCard, Memory Stick, SD Card, and XD-Picture Card slots on the front of the unit. Controls are minimal, nicely arranged, and sufficient for all the required actions. You can use the printer exclusive of any computer connection, but PC and Mac drivers are available. The Selphy CP800 is styled in matte black (though the input cassette is incongruously white), which seems more appropriate for a professional setting than the family den. In contrast, the bundled Selphy Photo Print software is definitely kid-oriented: fun, easy to use, and ready to step you through the print process. It even talks to you--not something most adults would want. The software's chirpy personality fits in better with Canon's beach-bucket-shaped Selphy CP790 snapshot model. Photo output from the Selphy CP800 arrived a little slower than average, with color photos emerging at 0.7 pages per minute and grayscale items printing at 0.8 ppm. Print quality was generally good: Flesh tones seemed smooth and natural, sports shots appeared bright and detailed, and grayscale images looked subtle. The printer struggled a bit, however, with the complex foliage patterns in a landscape shot; everything looked flat. The Selphy CP800's consumables are the worst aspect of the printer: inflexible, expensive, and wasteful. They come in bundles of media and ink cartridges. A five-print starter kit of postcard-size (3.94-by-5.83-inch) paper and ink arrives with the printer. A 108-sheet replacement kit costs $35, or a pricey 32 cents per print. A $15, 36-print bundle costs 41.6 cents per print. To print small labels on the Selphy CP800, you must buy a dedicated, $13 paper input cassette for that media size (2.13 by 3.39 inches), as well as the ink-and-paper pack. Ink that the machine doesn't use for a print is rolled up and never seen again, and the plastic cartridge that holds the ink roll is nonrecyclable. The Canon Selphy CP800 prints pretty good photos, but it does so slowly, and to the detriment of your budget and your local landfill. If you don't mind being limited to one size of photo, the Epson PictureMate Charm is a much better option in this price range.
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HP LaserJet 5200
Infos Laser , Unters. Fromatgrößen, 1200 , Duplexdruck Ja (Optional), Parallel, USB
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HP LaserJet 5200TN
Infos Laser , Unters. Fromatgrößen, 1200 , Parallel, USB
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Lexmark C544DN
Infos Laser Farbdrucker, Unters. Fromatgrößen, 4800 , Duplexdruck Ja (Standard), USB, USB 2.0, Ethernet 10100BaseTX
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Empfehlung von AlaTest DE vom 2012-02-05 00:00:00.0
Zusammenfassung der Testberichte für Lexmark C544dn
alaTest hat 68 Testberichte und Meinungen für Lexmark C544dn analysiert. Durchschnittliche Expertenbewertung: 82/100, und durchschnittliche Verbrauchermeinungen: 75/100. Im Vergleich zu 342.208 Testberichten von anderen Drucker ergibt sich daher ein alaScore von 69/100 = Gut.
…mehr Lexmark C544DN Testberichte
Empfehlung von Testseek DE vom 2011-06-08 00:00:00.0
Lexmark C544dn
Testseek.de hat 7 Expertenmeinungen über Lexmark C544dn eingeholt. Das duchschnittliche Epertenrating ist 82 von 100. Die durchschnittlich erreichte Punktezahl gibt die Meinung der Expertencommunity über das Produkt wieder. Klicken Sie unten und nutzen Sie Testseek um alle Beurteilungen, Produktauszeichnungen und Schlussfolgerungen sehen zu können.
Empfehlung von Macworld UK vom 2011-06-08 00:00:00.0
Lexmark C544DN review
MarkVision Professional software gives network managers the ability to regulate who is allowed to print what
Empfehlung von PC Advisor vom 2009-01-30 00:00:00.0
Lexmark C544dn review
With its great-looking output, small form factor, and money-saving toner program, Lexmark?s C544dn is a good fit for a small to medium-sized workgroup looking to add colour to presentations and brochures.
The Lexmark C544dn is an inexpensive colour laser printer suitable for small businesses.
Empfehlung von techWorld vom 2009-01-30 00:00:00.0
Lexmark C544dn review
With its great-looking output, small form factor, and money-saving toner program, Lexmark?s C544dn is a good fit for a small to medium-sized workgroup looking to add colour to presentations and brochures.
The Lexmark C544dn is an inexpensive colour laser printer suitable for small businesses.
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Brother HL-4150CDN
Infos Laser Farbdrucker, Unters. Fromatgrößen, 2400 dpi, Duplexdruck Ja (Standard), USB 2.0, Ethernet 10100
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Empfehlung von AlaTest DE vom 2012-02-05 00:00:00.0
Zusammenfassung der Testberichte für Brother HL-4150CDN
alaTest hat 141 Testberichte und Meinungen für Brother HL-4150CDN analysiert. Durchschnittliche Expertenbewertung: 72/100, und durchschnittliche Verbrauchermeinungen: 81/100. Im Vergleich zu 342.208 Testberichten von anderen Drucker ergibt sich daher ein alaScore von 82/100 = Sehr Gut.
…mehr Brother HL-4150CDN Testberichte
Empfehlung von Testseek DE vom 2011-12-20 00:00:00.0
Brother HL-4150CDN
Testseek.de hat 7 Expertenmeinungen über Brother HL-4150CDN eingeholt. Das duchschnittliche Epertenrating ist 74 von 100. Die durchschnittlich erreichte Punktezahl gibt die Meinung der Expertencommunity über das Produkt wieder. Klicken Sie unten und nutzen Sie Testseek um alle Beurteilungen, Produktauszeichnungen und Schlussfolgerungen sehen zu können.
Empfehlung von CNET.co.uk vom 2011-12-20 00:00:00.0
Brother HL-4150CDN
The HL-4150CDN is part of a new range of laser printers from Brother that offer colourprinting at an affordable price and are designed for those who need a printer that can churnout a lot of documents on a daily basis. This one is priced at around £300 and also has aduplexer, so it can automatically print on both sides of a sheet of paper. Business-like design Most manufacturers creating laser printers for business users don?t really bother themselveswith trying to make their devices look aesthetically appealing, but with its cuboid design andwhite side panels, the 4250CDN is a bit more attractive than most, especially as the whitecontrasts nicely with the dark grey finish of the main body of the printer. The control panel is quite basic, as it comprises just a two-line monochrome flip-up screenand a mere seven buttons, but the menu system isn't all that complicated, so it's still relativelyeasy to use. One interesting feature is the secure printing functionality. You can add asecurity code to documents via the printer driver, so the printer will store them in memory untilsomeone presses the Secure button and enters a passcode to release them. This is handyif you're in a shared office and need to print off more sensitive documents such as salaryinformation or confidential letters. On the front, just under the control panel, Brother has added a USB port. This isn?t for printingphotos from PictBridge cameras, but instead allows you to print documents like PDFfiles and JPEG and TIFF images directly from memory keys. Brother has added a duplexer to the HL-4150CDN which can work on two pages at the same time. The bottom of the printer houses a slot in cassette-style paper tray that can hold up to 250sheets at a time and there's a 500 sheet tray available as an option if you've got particularlydemanding print needs. Above this tray, hidden behind a pull-down panel, there's a 50 sheetfeeder tray for odd-sized papers and envelopes. As with most laser printers, all the printedmaterial gets fed into a recessed paper tray at the top of the machine and there's a small flip-up piece that helps to stop pages from falling off the front of the tray. Quick installation To get this model up and running, you first have to pull open a panel at the front to release the plastic tabs that protect the slide-out tray which houses the four toner cartridges. Onceyou?ve done this you can load up the drivers on your computer (both Windows and Macdrivers are supplied) and choose one of two connection methods ? Ethernet or USB (sadly,Wi-Fi isn?t supported). It's all pretty straight forward stuff, so no matter which connection option you choose you should be up and running in a matter of minutes. Speed, quality and cost For a colour model in this price range, the 4150CDN turns out to be a fairly pacey performerin terms of print speed. Our ten page black and white text document was delivered in 36seconds, while a colour version of the same document took an almost equally speedy 39seconds. Our colour graphics ten page test was a little bit slower at 57 seconds, but it wasfaster at our colour business presentation, producing this ten page document in a fairly rapid35 seconds. Brother has also added a duplexer to this model so it can automatically print both sides of apage. The duplexer actually behaves a bit differently than those on rival models as it can workon two pages at a time to speed up the process somewhat. This helped it to print a doublesided black and white version of our text document in 54 seconds, which is a good speed fora duplex model. The Brother HL-4150CDN produces decent prints, but colour accuracy is rather iffy. The 4150CDN also puts in a fairly good showing in terms of print quality. Black and whitetext, especially, is dense and cleanly formed. Colours are also rich and bold, too. However,colour accuracy is a little off, with colour documents looking a gooddeal darker than the original. One side effect of this was that orange blocks on our businesspresentation were a little bit too red compared onscreen colours. Also, there was some slightbanding on large blocks of colour. Running costs are quite reasonable, though. Using high capacity toner cartridges, a black andwhite sheet works out at 1.9p, while a colour page will set you back 8.4p. Both those pricesinclude 0.7p for paper costs and work out cheaper than many competitors models with similarprice tags. Conclusion Its colour print-outs may be a little bit dark for some tastes, but the 4150's modest runningcosts and fast print speed still make it a good bet for those who need to produce a lot ofcolour documents on a daily basis.
The Brother HL-4150CDN is a decent laser printer boasting a fancy duplexer which automatically prints on both sides of a page.
Empfehlung von Macworld UK vom 2011-06-06 00:00:00.0
Brother HL-4150CDN review
Text print quality is excellent and letters are well-formed, printing them crisply even at the smallest font sizes
Empfehlung von Techradar vom 2010-11-25 00:00:00.0
Brother HL-4150CDN
It's surprising how cheap colour laser printers have become. The new Brother range starts at only £260, though this particular model is a little more expensive at £445. The Brother HL-4150CDN can be connected through USB or Ethernet, and can serve one to 10 users. It has built-in LCD screen, a 250-sheet tray with an option for an extra 500 sheets and a 50-sheet multipurpose media tray for envelopes, thin card and more. For sensitive documents, there's PIN-protected printing. Windows 7, Vista, XP and 2000 are supported out of the box, as is Mac OS X 10.4.11 or later, with Linux drivers available to download from http://solutions.brother.com. Duplex printing is catered for, and you can print PDF, TIFF and JPEG files from a compatible USB drive.The Brother HL-4150CDN promises up to 24 pages per minute, with the first page out in under 16 seconds. We found these figures a little optimistic. Our 20-page test document printed in around one minute and 10 seconds, with the first page ready in 22.3 seconds. With Duplex switched on, it printed in one minute and 35 seconds, which is slower than the claimed seven pages per minute, but far from sluggish. Our photo test card printed in 23.3 seconds.Print quality was pretty good for a laser printer of this price. Text printing was clear and vivid, with even the smallest point sizes perfectly readable. It could've been a little darker, but without comparing it side by side to a print-out from a more expensive laser printer, you're unlikely to find fault with the Brother HL-4150CDM. Colour documents also printed very well, with clear text, good contrast and very little banding. Colours were rich and accurate, and shading well realised. It was less capable when reproducing photographs. The images were a little grainy, the grayscale ramp very banded and colour reproduction was definitely over-dark. To be fair, photo printing is hardly the main reason for buying a colour laser printer, but it's worth bearing in mind if you print a lot of documents containing photos.A secure printing option keeps sensitive documents away from prying eyes. After entering a four-digit number on your computer, the print job is passed to the printer, but not actually printed until you enter the same code on the HL-4150CDN's screen. Very useful if your printer is networked and shared.As well as being inexpensive to buy, the Brother HL-4150CDN is reasonably cost-effective to run. Taking the higher-yield toner cartridges at the prices offered on Brother's website, the cost per page of a black and white print-out is 1.73 pence, and colour pages at 12.29 pence (both figures offered without the cost of the paper itself). Perhaps the colour cost is a little high, but it's bound to fall as the printer series achieves market penetration and net-discounted cartridges arrive.
Empfehlung von whatlaptop.co.uk vom 2010-11-25 00:00:00.0
Brother HL-4150CDN
It's surprising how cheap colour laser printers have become. The new Brother range starts at only £260, though this particular model is a little more expensive at £445. The Brother HL-4150CDN can be connected through USB or Ethernet, and can serve one to 10 users.
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OKI C801N
Infos Laser Farbdrucker, A3, 1200 dpi, Duplexdruck Nein, USB
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HP LaserJet 5200DTN
Infos Laser , Unters. Fromatgrößen, 1200 , Duplexdruck Ja (Standard), Parallel, USB
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Lexmark C544DTN
Infos Laser Farbdrucker, Unters. Fromatgrößen, 1200 , Duplexdruck Ja (Standard), USB 2.0
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