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- HP LaserJet 5500DN Network Printer w/ Duplex
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Canon imageCLASS D480 Laser All-in-One Printer (2711B054AA)
Laser All-in-One with Duplex Versatility, Built-in Networking, and cost saving Single Cartrodge System
Color: White/Blue Brand: Canon Model: D480 Platform: Windows Format: CD Number of items: 1 Dimensions: 14.20" h x 15.40" w x 17.40" l, 28.00 pounds 2-sided Copying, Printing, Faxing, and Scanning Copy and Print in black and white at 23 ppm Quick First Print provides first copy in approximately 9 seconds 50-sheet Automatic Document Feeder Networking, Super G3 Fax, and 250 sheet paper cassette
From the Manufacturer Print, Copy, Fax, Scan and Network using the Canon imageCLASS D480. Enhancing small and home office operation, Canon’s imageCLASS D480 provides all-mode duplex capabilities for printing, copying, scanning and receiving faxes. With this duplexing capability, customers will be able to significantly reduce paper consumption by duplex printing documents from a PC, or on incoming faxes. The unit also allows users to copy two single-sided pages to double-sided output or double-sided pages to double-sided output.
Most helpful customer reviews 68 of 68 people found the following review helpful. Good hardware, Lousy software By Jason Whittington This device is basically identical to the MF4370dn which is heavily (and positively) reviewed. As near as I can tell there are three differences between the two units: 1) The D480 is beige, the MF4370 black 2) The D480 has am improved document feeder 3) The D480 has more complete duplexing than the MF4370. I was actually alerted to #3 by an Amazon review. You can put a stack of two-sided documents into the feeder and produce a set of two-sided duplicates. According to the Amazon reviewer the MF4370 will take two-sided docs in the feeder but can only produce single-sided docs in response. I haven't tried this with a thick stack of documents but onesie/twosie stuff seems to work great, at least with plain copy paper. I tried duplex-copying a mortgage statement printed on thick paper and the feeder choked on it. Copying is fast, quiet and sharp. I'm delighted by it, actually. Duplexing is really simple. Manually scanning two different sheets onto one two-sided document or just copying a two-sided document are both very easy. The biggest limitation is the size of the platen. I didn't think I'd even notice this but if you're used to throwing down a book or something of a full-size copy machine you'll feel a bit cramped. If you want to scan oversized stuff you're of out of luck, but that's true of every machine in this price range. The D480 seems to be a perfectly capable printer and supports full duplexing right from software. I do most of my printing to an HP 3600dn and don't see that changing except for printing music, where duplexing will be really nice to have. Network printing was really easy to set up. Scanning is where this device falls a bit flat, and that's due almost entirely to the software, not the hardware. Even thought it has a Vista logo on the box it still relies on TWAIN drivers so it doesn't integrate with "Scanners and Cameras" under Vista. The software they ship to scan with is hokey but seems to work. I guess I can hope that Canon will ship updated drivers but I won't hold my breath. I am a little peeved at MSFT for letting Canon put a Vista logo on the box. Network scanning is a joke on this device (same as with MF4370). The process for doing this is just stupid, and the file transfer is ungodly slow. I was hoping to just pop some docs into the ADF and press a button and have them show up but you can't really do it in the backgrond and the file transfer times are godawful slow. This is partly due to the size of the data but not completely - it's REALLY REALLY SLOW. To give you an idea it took something like a minute or two to transfer an 88KB image. That's KILOBYTES. I think the scanner must send a raw dump over the network which is processed on the host machine. In any case, it's tricky to set up and basically unusable. Note to Canon: "Scan to USB Flash Drive" would be a far better feature. On the bright side there is support for scanning several pages from the ADF into a single (or multiple) PDFs. There is some sort of OCR software but I haven't tried to use it yet. We hope to scan bills and whatnot and toss the originals - I guess I'll see how well that works out. I haven't tried the faxing capability. Having a halfway decent ADF will be a godsend for sending contracts or NDAs around, but I'll probably rely more on scanning to PDF than actually faxing. I never receive faxes - I use online services like eFax. Finally I have to ding the awful documentation. It's really quite bad - I had to call tech support to try to figure out network scanning and found out that even though I didn't want to use USB scanning I still had to do a USB install. Oops. If you want to do anything non-trivial you're going to be experimenting and cursing a bit. Canon's tech support was actually quite good, but better docs would have saved them the cost of the call. So, as the title says, the hardware is
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