|
|
Reviews Around The Web
|
Choose Web Reviews from this Maker:
|
|
|
|
Friday, March 12, 2010
|
|
|
|
|
"Today for review I?ve got another printer for you, it?s an All-in-one from Lexmark called the Interact S605. The S605 is not a bad printer, the print quality is very good for everything, photos come out beautiful, and the regular printing is very good as well. This printer is a networked printer over wireless, but it can also connect to the internet and you can view newsfeeds and access other things from the internet right on the display. The display is a nice and large 4.3? touch screen display, it?s color and it?s even animated as well for some things. As a printer it?s not bad, but I ran across some issues with it that didn?t make me too happy, I even had to call tech support at one point, so read on to learn more? "
|
|
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
|
|
|
|
|
A desktop-friendly device, Lexmark's E260dn provides good all-around convenience and a compact design that fits just about anywhere. Add in the fact that it's very quiet and easy on the eyes, and you?ve got a neat office partner to spend your day with. If you?re looking for hassle-free printing and don't have specific paper handling or finishing requirement, the E260dn is a good value choice. Print quality is perfectly acceptable for text, but images are a bit disappointing. Lexmark even throws in a basic network management application along with the driver itself, which provides both PCL 6 and Postscript Level 3 emulations along with the ability to print watermarks and multiple pages per sheet. We'd have liked the ability to walk-up and print via a USB memory stick, along with the option of fitting Wi-Fi, but these features would bump the price.
|
|
Friday, June 6, 2008
|
|
|
|
|
Similar to the X4875 and other models in the Professional Series inkjet line, the biggest selling point of the X9575 is the new warranty program from Lexmark that includes next-business-day replacement for up to one year after purchase. Furthermore, both high-yield and standard-yield cartridges are available for this series, should you intend to do larger print runs. At the top of the new line is the X9575, which offers built-in automatic two-sided printing, colour print speeds of up to 5ppm (11ppm for black), a 48-bit flatbed colour scanner, and pigmented inks that are highlighter, water and smudge.
|
|
Monday, May 26, 2008
|
|
|
|
|
When it comes to scanning the X4875 was fine for making digital backups of letters and passports. But if you want to digitise photos to enlarge later, you'll ideally need a resolution of 2400x4800ppi, which is only possible with software enhancement. Scan were typically low resolution, and grainy. The device can easily produce readable (if not necessarily beautiful) photocopies of documents, but it's not suitable for bulk copying or making pristine reproductions of photos. Nevertheless, the X4875 is a very handy home-office addition for weekend workers who don't require a fax.
|
|
Friday, November 23, 2007
|
|
|
|
|
This is a multifunction colour laser printer with a low asking price and it could see a lot of application in small offices. It's not that quick, particularly when printing colour, and is quite bulky, but print quality is reasonable, especially when printing text. It's a little bit expensive to print colour on and the five different maintenance intervals could be irritating, especially if your print output is high each month.
|
|
Friday, August 3, 2007
|
|
|
|
|
There's no doubt it can be useful to have a printer which doesn't need to be connected to a PC via a USB cable. If you already have a wireless network in your home or office, or if you're contemplating getting one later on, the Z1420 is an inexpensive printer to buy and run. It's also a very slow printer, particularly printing colour, and doesn't give the best print quality you can get, even at this low entry price.
|
|
Wednesday, July 25, 2007
|
|
|
|
|
Lexmark has enjoyed considerable success with its economically priced all-in-ones and has a wide range of machines with slightly different functions sets, to suit most home and home office customers. The X4550 sits towards the higher end of the range and boasts wireless as well as a USB connection.
|
|
Friday, June 22, 2007
|
|
|
|
|
Lexmark has long been a main player in expandable laser printers, machines that can grow with you as your business develops, offering more paper trays, collation and stapling facilities and separate feeds for envelopes and special media. The T642 is one such machine, which starts as a simple but quick, standalone printer, and can be expanded to the large workgroup or small departmental level, by judicious addition of options.
|
|
Tuesday, April 17, 2007
|
|
|
|
|
Instead of having to connect to a PC with a photo quality printer attached, you can make high quality photo prints where ever you have an electrical outlet. Leave the Lexmark P450 Compact Photo Printer with CD Burner in the living room, take it to the Grandparent's house, or even leave it out during a party or special event for instant memories.
|
|
Saturday, January 27, 2007
|
|
|
|
|
Lexmark has a lot of all-in-ones in its stable, but the newly launched X9350 is the best equipped of the lot. Designed to be a top-end home or home-office device, it should be able to handle a wide cross-section of printing tasks.
|
|
Friday, December 22, 2006
|
|
|
|
|
Decked out in light and dark grey, the E352dn is a squat machine with an economical footprint for its class. At the bottom is a 250-sheet input tray and you can buy a second, optional, 550-sheet tray to sit under it. Above the paper tray is a multi-purpose feeder, though this can only take a single sheet at a time. Print jobs finish up in a recess in the printer's top cover.
|
|
Friday, January 20, 2006
|
|
|
|
|
Lexmark's desire to produce the lowest price printers on the market has done very well for it. Its entry-level machines are found in most high-street shops as well as selling many thousands on-line. Its latest wheeze, to sell three-colour printers as the epitome of simplicity, has now extended to its cheapest all-in-one device to date. We found the X2350 on-line for a tad under £40, which looks like a bargain...
|
|
Friday, November 25, 2005
|
|
|
|
|
Lexmark's new E342n is a squat, black and silver mono laser printer. Even though it's not much bigger than the personal lasers of a few years back it's designed for a small business or a small workgroup in a larger office. Lexmark claims that it can print at up to 28ppm, with the first page out in as little as 7.5 seconds. The E342's angular lines and unusual colour scheme combine to produce a good looking printer, a little deeper -- though rather wider -- than an A4 page. This is a conventional design, with paper feeding from a 250 sheet tray, which slides out from the bottom of the front panel, to an output tray set into the top...
|
|
Friday, November 4, 2005
|
|
|
|
|
This is a versatile little machine, capable of all the standalone functions you'd expect of a photo printer. The addition of the CD-R drive is an excellent archival tool and the ability to display a slide show on your TV and to transfer photos from a camera or phone, via an optional Bluetooth link, adds to its practicality...
|
|
Friday, September 9, 2005
|
|
|
|
|
The P6350 is a well-designed machine at a budget price. It can produce very acceptable colour photos, though plain paper prints are less impressive - it's also both easy to use and versatile. Print costs are reasonable for the class of machine, as long as you take the first low-ink warnings with a pinch of salt. For anybody with the normal cross-section of home printing tasks, it's a sound choice...
|
|
|
|
|
|