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Including the printer, the paper, and the quality of the printing. However, a good rule of thumb is that a pixel per inch (ppi) of 300 is generally considered to be sufficient for printing.
20 Best Pixel Per Inch For Printing
Product Image
Product Name
Features
Price
Canon PP-301 4 x 6" Photo Paper Plus Glossy II 100 Sheets
Immortalize precious photographs with these 4″H x 6″W Canon Photo Paper Plus sheets. Their glossy finish provides brilliant picture quality with 92 percent ISO brightness, and they’re 10. 6-mil thick for long-lasting keepsake quality.
This Canon Photo Paper Plus pack contains 100 sheets to let you print in large quantities for your photo album project.
Very high quality prints using Canon PP-201 6×4 Photo Paper Plus Glossy II in my new Canon Pixma TS8351 printer. Framed and displayed. I have been a long-time user of Stinkyink for compatible cartridges, but this is the first time I have bought paper from them.
Service is always excellent. Strongly recommended.
I purchased some cheap photo paper from Amazon to use with my very expensive photo printer and was disappointed when the colors looked washed out. After days of diagnosing the printer I finally realized that it might be the media and not the machine.
I purchased the Canon photo paper from Best Buy, tossed it in the printer and printed a family photo. WOW! What a difference, I had a hunch it would be a little bit better but this was night and day with color accuracy.
Highly recommend if you want to print your own photos at home.
Keyboard and pen/stylus are sold separately. Google pixel slate is made to deliver brilliant entertainment, portable performance and everything you love about google for how you live & work today 12.
3-inch molecular display with 6 million pixels brings your favorite movies and videos to life. Tuned to perfection, the dual front firing speakers deliver a premium audio experience Get more done with powerful multitasking tools including split screen, multi window browsing, and collaboration apps like google docs, sheets, and slides.
Pixel slate automatically updates in the background, so you’ll always have the latest features and security without any hassles. Staying connected is easier than ever with duo cam’s wide angle lens that keeps everyone in view and makes them look great, even in low light.
Battery performance is based on a mix of video, web browsing, productivity and other use. Charging time requires the battery to be at least 5 percent charged, the device to be inactive and use of included charger.
Slate Chromeos Tablet is a slick and well made device using 8th Generation i5 mobile processor. So no fans, or even heat vents. Whilst this means a little slower than a full i5 (only 2 cores / 4 threads) it is still snappy and of course being native Google everything works slickly.
The front firing speakers give amazing sound. The picture is bright QHD type resolution. The picture is fab. battry life is OK, you would need to lower the screen brightness to get the longer times advertised.
You get a full backlit keyboard with the Brydge accessory. This is excactly the same coloure as the tablet. Simple slide into the clamps and you have a perfect laptop. Keyboard is brilliant. Slightly spongy but my typing speed / accuracy was very good.
Black keys show finger grease a bit, but it can easily be cleaned. Backlighting is variable. Trackpad is great. Does everything smoothly and allows gestures. Battery life is not as long as advertised – but then I have used it as a laptop with intensive use.
You can daisy chain charging from the tablet to the keyboard (with optional cable). You can get a week heavy use from a single charge. With Linux, Android and full Chrome browser this is a wicked mix of useful applications, and the ability to run full office software like Softmaker (linux);MS Office (Android light version); games; video (Netflix, Prime, IPTV etc).
A different approach to iPads (open and not closed) – two USB C ports – both can charge. This means you can attach any peripherals – a usb c port extender works fine. So a tablet, a laptop, and a screen size good enough to work for a full day.
Great combo. Chromeos will not be for everybody. It is simple, but also misses some obvious screen shot and copy / paste tools. It can all be done, but you need to learn the tricks. If your life is around a browser, you’ll find brilliant full chrome browser, and the option to load Edge, Brave, Opera, Vivaldi full browsers using the Linux part.
UI is slick and all launched from a single interface. Android and Linux integrates beautifully for notifications and use. Hard to fault the concept. Finally remember these are QUICK compared to MacOS or Windows as the OS is very light.
Well it took me quite a while to go for this as not really any pads this size around. didnt want an apple, I would have preferred a Android tablet. I’ve come From a 12. 1 Samsung Galaxy pro. And apparently Android tablets are becoming a thing of the past and chrome books are more in, having said that apparently chrome books are on there way out as well if you read everything you see on the net.
First of all let me say it’s not getting used as a work station so purley a expensive browser with loads of storage for films / photos. No expansion of the gb it has 256 so big enough. you can plug external HDD in.
The slate is very good quality the speakers are brilliant screen is brilliant, very hard to cast films to TV only done it once,think this is a Google thing not liking you casting films not perchesed from them, YouTube casts fine.
please note you carn’t connect to a computer that was a big thing for me I didn’t know. not recognized. if I could turn the clock back would hopefully wait for an Android tablet to appear. you have to use a USB dongle to move stuff around.
pain. lots of things it doesn’t do that a Android dose just not as easy to use. it is more like a computer, I am getting there but I’m persivering.
I’ve been an android user when it comes to my phones for years but when it came for tablets i almost always had ipads. Being that i’m Google everything these days( camera, thermostatm wifi routers, phone, smoke detectors, doorbell, chromecast) I finally decided to switch to a pixel slate and acrually traded my ipad pro for it.
When my pixel slate works, I love it but daily it has software issues. Chrome OS just glitches. Chrome browser will just start displaying blank white screens in which impacts the ability to get into settings.
Apps will just sit there and not install. A reboot will fix it for a bit but the issue always comes back. Chrome beta works perfectly every time but there’s no way to make it default. It also gets very hot with use.
With the price paid, this tablet is definitely an awesome value. Despite all the early comment from tech media that tendency negative, with all the updates made so far to ChromeOS, those comments become irrelevant anymore.
What you get is now a solid Chromebook device with good tablet function. The bad part of it I think it is not a lap-able device. Otherwise, it is a highly recommended device.
Keep the printer stocked up and ready to go with Hammermill Premium Color Copy Paper HAM102630. This letter-size paper is available in 100 brightness photo white and comes in reams of 500 sheets, offering plenty to print out everything from text documents to graphics and more.
The Hammermill copy paper features an ultra-smooth surface with a high brightness that will make your work stand out. It also features a heavier weight than traditional printer paper for a professional appearance.
This Hammermill 32-lb paper is engineered to work on all digital presses, color laser printers and color copiers. It offers a more stable surface for heavier toner applications and brilliant color and makes a practical choice for use at home, school and the office.
Plus, it’s backed by the 99. 99 percent jam-free guarantee.
I was recommended this paper for copic coloring. It is NOT for Copic coloring even though everyone seems to like it. I cannot figure out why, the paper is SUPER thin and you get tons of bleed through on just two strokes.
It also feathers like crazy. I do however love the paper in my printer but I didn’t initially buy it for that reason. So Copic lovers, if you are having trouble blending or just don’t like how your artwork is coming out.
its not you! I would recommend Xpress it blending card for Copics and leave this to your printer. I know a lot of people are going to disagree with me and I am by NO means a Copic expert (but if you are a beginner, SAVE YOUR MONEY FOR THE XPRESS IT!).
My star rating is JUST FOR COPIC USE, as paper for your printer I love it :).
This 500 sheet ream of paper came in a box larger than the actual ream. Inside, it had minimal packaging filler so the ream bounced around during transit and was completely loose upon opening. The paper was everywhere with bent/curled edges.
I bought this ream for the 28 lb. weight and sturdiness. The copy paper itself has a super slick smooth finish and is barely stronger than my normal 22 lb. copy paper. I ran one sheet through my printer and it is awful.
Extremely flimsy for what I am accustomed to 28 lb. copy paper being. Tried an online return and was prompted to visit Sam’s Club instead. Not what I want to be advised to do during COVID-19. Waste of money!.
Paper is great – packaging is NOT. EACH of the reams we’ve purchased has been split and opened at the side and ends. The paper has been ok, but this packaging or shipping method should be looked at. It’s a shame that it’s such poor packaging, though, because the paper itself is very nice quality.
Google Pixel 4 XL is the phone made the Google Way, with a camera that takes a perfect shot every time and the new Google Assistant. It also provides Motion Sense technology. Google Pixel 4 XL is built around Google software you know and love that’s always getting better.
The Google Pixel 4Xl 128Gb Black is one of my current phones. I had gotten it from Google Fi when I signed up for one of their phone plans for unlimited data and phone service. When I receive it I enjoyed it very much, it’s the first time I got to use an OLED display capable of 4K video.
Everything was going great until about 6 months in and my pixel’s back panel had started coming off. The reason why was because the battery was bulging so much that it was popping the back panel off the phone.
So, since it was still under warranty they were glad to replace it with a new one. So a day or two later the replacement arrives and I send off the old one after transferring everything over and erasing it’s memory and drives.
A couple months later Google Fi disconnect my account because they say my bill was overdue, but that was weird because I had been paying it. They said it was over $10,000 for ONE MONTH!!! I told them they were crazy and that they had made a mistake but they insisted, no matter who I spoke to, that it was correct and that I had to pay or else.
SO, I told them fine, and now I don’t have service on the phone but use it as a wifi only device and about a month later the back panel of the replacement phone started to come off as well and again because the batter was expanding so much it was pushing the panel away from the phone and so now I just use it without the panel on and it has been working fine ever since.
Google still thinks I owe the outrageously high bill and now they are even saying that I had been paying that price the previous months and I told them NO, anyone in the right mind wouldn’t pay that much unless they had a solid gold phone that could be used as a satellite phone and talk to the International Space Station.
They showed me evidence that apparently either they were paying for it or they were charging someone else for it and then I would send in the amount I was told to pay at the end of the cycle, and they even showed me that every month they were charging me nearly $10k but for some reason I actually never paid that amount, but someone was.
lol. Anyways, Google Fi and the Google Pixel 4 are the worst things I have ever had to use. Phones just manufactured shouldn’t have to be replaced so soon after purchase because batteries shouldn’t be bulging so soon after they are made.
Have never had a more capable and reliable phone. I have only ever seen this level of craftsmanship and compatibility in an iPhone. Every Google product I have works SEAMLESSLY with my Pixel and the squeeze to activate Google Assistant is just amazing.
I use it every day. I will definitely be upgrading to the 6 Pro soon, as I am a photography nut and the 6 Pro handles images better, but I love the 4XL so much that I’ll be keeping it as a secondary phone/content storage.
Plus, with the camera being as good as it is on the 4XL, I won’t need to buy a vlog camera, as the Pixel 4XL handles video SO WELL. Everyday tasks are a BREEZE on the 4XL. It handles every task I throw at it without a single hiccup and I am a HEAVY user.
Which brings me to the battery. Even using Bluetooth, the 4XL lasts me most of the day. And considering I work alot these days, it actually lasts me a lot longer than a day, as I no longer use it for music.
I get 3 days of regular use without Bluetooth on a single charge. And with the fast charging built in, it’s ready to go again in under an hour. Media-intesive tasks can take a toll on the battery, but all-in-all, the 4XL is a TROOPER.
Definitely recommend the Pixel range as a whole, but the 4XL is definitely something special! Especially if you’re not looking for the latest model, but want something that can play with the big boys.
Like this phone but it doesn’t last long at all. I started getting pixels when the 3 hit the market and optimistically speaking they were pretty nice. Unfortunately that niceness never lasted long. I’ve now been through 2 pixel 3s and now this phone and each and every one of them has had some sort of defect.
The first pixel 3 had its audio suddenly stop working after no damage whatsoever. The second pixel 3 suddenly started having battery failure out of nowhere, again without damage. And now after switching to the 4 hoping it would be better I’m yet again experiencing battery failure.
I ended up replacing the battery and the new one, which was an official Google battery, only lasted me two and a half months. Now I have to deal with battery failure that requires to be plugged in 24/7, screen flickering, back cam not working, and all buttons ceasing to work at one point or another.
I have done nothing but be careful with my devices and still I’ve had failure after failure after failure on Pixel devices. Do not buy if you like longevity, or if you do buy, hope your experience isn’t as dogshit as mine.
I am completely fed up with Pixels and tired of the only solution being to wipe my entire phone. For a multibillion dollar company Google sure knows how to make a phone with a lot of stuff wrong with it.
The imageCLASS MF3010 is an ultra-compact and easy-to-use multifunction printer that delivers high-quality black and white prints, copies and color scans. It boasts print and copy speeds of up to 19 pages-per-minute (ppm) for letter-sized output, and delivers Quick First Prints in approximately eight seconds.
The unit also offers paper handling of up to 150 pages in a front loading cassette. Print sharp monochrome output with resolution up to 1200 x 600 dpi and through use of the platen glass color scans are captured in 24-bit color at an interpolated resolution of up to 9600 dpi.
For added productivity the MF3010 includes unique features such as the I. D. Card Copy, which allows you to create copies of your identification cards or other small documents to keep for your records on a convenient one-sided document.
It offers a simple control panel (7-segment, 1-digit LED) and features Canon’s Single Cartridge System, which combines toner, drum and waster toner into one unit for easy maintenance.
Buy cheap, buy twice (I hope I don’t have to) 01/12/2014 (I couldn’t change this insulting nickname). I need to do a lot of printing for my college classes (I am a student). I gave my HP inkjet all-in-one to my dad, and got this laser printer.
It prints in black-and-white only but it’s OK with me, and the price was right (the cartridges are very expensive but cheaper compatible ones can be obtained online). The initial cartridge is supposed to last for 700 pages, and the regular cartridge for 1,600 pages.
There is also a toner-saving mode (which has to be constantly reset back to ON). Also, laser-printed pages don’t smear when you make notes on them like the ink-jet-printed pages, and it prints FAST. It also has to be set on a hard, level surface and is not portable like my inkjet which I could hook up to my laptop on my futon, but I am not complaining about that, it’s the price I had to pay for having a laser printer.
I’ve had it for about 2 weeks, and it works so far. HOWEVER. The reason for the 3 stars is that it chews up about every 10th page of printing making me very nervous that this time I will not be able to get the page out (you need to open it up and take out the toner cartridge in order to do that, and sometimes part of the page stays behind and, since I cannot get at it with my fingers, I need to keep a pair of tweezers on my desk for the task).
I don’t know what causes it to happen, I am afraid to breathe when it is printing. It does know to reprint the messed up page, so you don’t have to restart anything. You also have to be there to catch every printed page with perfect timing (without pulling on it or leaving it in too long even with the plastic thingie extended).
I did purchase the 2-year replacement plan but I dread sending the printer back: it is big and just about impossible to pack properly. For the above reasons, I would not recommend buying this. I couldn’t afford a more expensive one, and I hope this one won’t break down completely.
I hope it won’t become the case of “buy cheap, buy twice”.
I got this Canon MF 3010 Laser to replace an inkjet “all in one” printer. I don’t do a lot of printing and I do a little more scanning and this printer is saving me money. I’ve had several “all in one” ink jet printers.
Since I don’t print much, it seemed whenever I needed to print, my ink cartridges had dried up and required replacing. This meant frequently replacing cartridges to print a few letters, envelopes or journal pages and it became very expensive as well as time consuming and frustrating.
Every time a new inkjet cartridge is installed in an inkjet it must be properly aligned and print heads cleaned, wasting ink and time. Finally in frustration, since almost all the little printing I do is in black and white, I decided to explore laser printers.
They used to be very expensive. Was I surprised at how inexpensive they are now! I researched and shopped and finally decided on the Canon MF 3010 Laser. First, it is compact and takes up little space on my desk.
Second, it’s quiet and economical, since one toner cartridge will provide about 1500 printed pages (the “starter” cartridge that comes with the printer only does about 700 copies). Third, It scans in COLOR with good resolution and makes quick copies in black and white.
It also has several nice time saving features, like two sided copying, enlarging and reducing copy size, etc. Fourth, toner cartridges are readily available on-line through numerous sources from $18 (re-manufactured) to $60 new.
Fifth, Installation of the printer, the drivers and accompanying software was easy, just FOLLOW THE INSTRUCTIONS step by step. If you are replacing a printer, it is best that you remove all your old printer drivers and software from your computer before installing the Canon MF 3010 Laser software to avoid conflicts.
I had my printer out of the box, set up and working in about 15-20 minutes and I’m no computer geek by any means. Cartridge installation is a snap and there is no need to align or clean print heads, like with an inkjet printer.
So far, it has performed flawlessly and done everything I want it to do. I hope this Canon MF 3010 Laser will be the last printer I’ll have to buy. I highly recommend it for the average home user who just needs black and white printing, a basic copier and color scanning.
For around $100, and no more wasting money on ink cartridges that dry out, it will soon pay for itself.
Got this laser printer after getting fed up with HP Photosmarts that had to keep being reset, would tell me the carriage was jammed when it wasn’t, and would insist on a new ink cartridge after just a few uses.
So far this laser is working great. It is basic: prints in black only, no wireless, have to supply your own printer cable, no paper feed, no double sided printing. The Canon support is worthless — it won’t even let me access the manual online because I have a Mac.
But the good points far outweigh the bad: compact in size — taller than the HP Photosmart but has a smaller footprint so it takes less room on my desk, lightweight, has handles for easy moving. Holds a goodly supply of paper.
Very easy to install the cartridge. I’ve only used it for a few weeks but it promises to produce a lot more copies for a lot less money than an ink-jet. Can set it to print in draft form so it uses less ink which works just fine for most of my printing.
Canon claims that this printer works with a Mac. But you need to download two drivers from the Canon website. And, when it still would not communicate with the Mac the Canon support people told me it was an Apple problem.
I had to do my own research and download another driver from Australia (I think) and tell the Mac to use the UK driver. Fortunately, helpful people on line posted detailed instructions on how to do this.
Once I got it working with the Mac I am VERY happy with it. Best of all the price was right. Would have given it 5 stars except for the poor Canon support.
Introducing Pixel 7 Pro, Google’s best-of-everything phone. Powered by Google Tensor G2, it’s fast and secure, with an immersive display and amazing battery life.
Yes, the camera is nice. It is an overall decent phone. Bring back the Finger Print ID on the back of the phone! It feels so comfortable and natural for people with larger hands. The thumb scanner/finger scanner on the front is often uncomfortable to use to get it to register correctly, since most people hold the phone at an angle slightly.
After trying this phone I will be going back to my Pixel 5. It is comparably the same, you barely notice the difference in specifications unless you are using your phone explicitly for the camera. I would not waste my money to get this or to upgrade to this.
Initial impression is this is an improved device over the 6 series. Seems smoother, faster, and haven’t witnessed the thermal throttling as the 6 pro would do as of day one (not saying it doesn’t, just not noticeable so far).
Cameras and features in the app have improved enough to deserve saying there’s a definite feeling of upgrade there with the new zoom feeling like a world apart from the zoom experience on every other camera in a phone I’ve experienced (this is many also).
The feeling when holding and the appearance of the device is just more “premium” I believe is the term being used. To me it’s simply nicer in every way but screen and battery appear unchanged.
Wiell I pre ordered the Pixel 7 Pro on 10. 6. 22. I use my phone on Google Fi and got $100 off when I link my new phone to my Fi account. Security & the camera are the reasons for my upgrade. At 77 I get so many fake calls,SMS spam etc that Call Screen has saved me from a lot of grief.
Voice typing will help me communicate easier in this upgrade. I ordered the Hazel 7 Pro with 512 gigs of storage. Can’t wait!!!.
Imprimez vos photos de famille préférées pour les afficher dans votre maison et dans les albums avec ce papier Epson. Avec sa finition brillante lisse, ce papier vous aidera à faire ressortir le meilleur de vos photos.
La base revêtue de résine est également facilement manipulable avec un grammage de 252 g / m2 et une épaisseur de 10,4 mil. En outre, il es résistant aux taches et à l’eau et présente une opacité nominale de 97% et une luminosité de 92%.
This paper is to go with Epson inks. This is why I purchased it. I would only buy it on sale as it is expensive. I have used Office Depot paper in the past and could not tell the difference. Who knows!?? I simply can not find out answers to this.
Is there a special chemical in the Epson papers that make it so special? At any rate, this was on sale so I bought it once again.
I have purchased this product several times. First time, I purchased for my Canon Printer because I could not find the Canon photo paper and it worked well with that printer. I now have an Epson printer, and I purchased this product for my new printer.
The quality is wonderful, and the photos turn out terrific.
Heavyweight material is durable to produce long-lasting photos
Matte finish paper features special coating to optimize output
Bright-white surface lets you print superior images
Product Details
Get photo lab quality prints without leaving your home with the Canon MP101LTR Matte Photo Paper. The matte finish and heavy 0. 22mm thickness gives your prints amazing colour quality and brilliant detail.
Designed for high-resolution printing this paper is perfect for creating photo albums, Christmas cards, brochures, etc. This matte photo paper is made to last with Canon-rate light fastness of up to 15 years; this means you will be enjoying your photos for years to come.
TraduireAfficher dans la langue originaleI think this is one of the best photo papers I’ve ever used. However, I don’t use it for photos as I don’t have the needed camera. I use it for coloring. I don’t like the standard coloring books for adults.
I go online and find free coloring pictures and print them out on this photo paper. I have tried many different brands but this is the best. It will take gel pens, oil-based pencils, water-based pencils.
Everything I’ve tried comes out great. For me, it is the only paper to use for coloring. Since this is so good for coloring, I’m going to assume that it will do the same for photos. Great paper!.
Looking for a reliable printing equipment? Then choose the Dell C1760nw Color Laser Printer. This laser printer comprises of 600 x 600 DPI resolution that both could be used for Black & White and Colored prints.
Deploying this printer, you’re guaranteed that high quality printouts are unleashed with every use. Inclusion of built-in Ethernet and Wireless connectivity provides a medium to share the printer on a wireless network, using an embedded WiFi and fetch prints with utmost ease.
Print directly from Androidtm mobile devices with Dell Mobile Print app or from an iOS mobile devices with Print Mobile App for Dell. Handle high-volume printing jobs with a large duty cycle scaling up to 30,000 pages a month; plus experience excellent print quality and reliable printing with Dell Clear View LED technology.
Up to 15 ppm – B/W – A4 (8.27 in x 11.69 in)/ANSI A (Letter) (8.5 in x 10.98 in) Up to 12 ppm – color – A4 (8.27 in x 11.69 in)/ANSI A (Letter) (8.5 in x 10.98 in)
Built-in Devices
Status LCD
Connectivity Technology
Wireless
Reviews From Real Customers
I have a couple of inkjet printers that have become troublesome to maintain. If you don’t use them regularly, the jets clog up and the print quality quickly deteriorates. Looking at alternatives I came across the Dell C1760 at about $100.
This piqued my interest immediately given the low cost. Next I looked at the cost for toner, as that can be the deal-breaker; low up-front cost with high ongoing maintenance costs. I quickly found aftermarket (non-Dell OEM) toner can be purchased at a very reasonable cost.
So I made the purchase. So far I have been very pleased. Setup was very easy. I connected it to my home network and I am able to connect it to all of my computers (except Chromebooks – need to figure that out yet.
) The print quality is excellent with none of the issues you have with inkjets. My only issue is 2-sided printing. The one spec list I read said it supports 2-sided printing. I guess that’s the technicality: it DOESN’T do DUPLEX printing.
That is, it is NOT a printer that automatically flips the paper to print on both sides. It’s a manual process of reloading the paper and having it print the opposite side. Live and learn, but not a deal-breaker for me.
Overall very pleased with this and may buy one more for our home and/or possibly son for college.
The printer produces pretty good color pictures and text (relative to other color lasers). The aftermarket toner can be bought for cheap from online sources as well. The reason it doesn’t get perfect 5 stars is that it does require somewhat more advance setup for wifi usuage.
The printer must be set to a static Ip on your wireless router and you have to make sure the print server settings are setup to always get the DNS values properly. If you do this, the printer will always be able to wake up from a deep sleep.
The problem I had before doing all of this was that the printer would not print or was not seen by the computers after it went into deep sleep power savings mode. The only way I could print was to power cycle the printer.
The computers would think the printer was offline. After the setup above, the printer can now wake up to print perfectly. So minus 1 star for the lost hours and time to setup the wireless printer. In case anyone wonders, before the setup, it worked beautifully for a month before it started to show offline on the computers.
Not sure what happen but now it’s back to the way it was from day 1. -Henry.
The product arrived with only paper around it for packaging. I had to assemble the doors that fell off in shipping. It makes a loud squeaking noise while printing. I had to set it up for Black and White only because it arrived with the magenta showing out.
There was a ton of residue around the cartridges. I assume from shipping so I am not confident it will last long.
HP PhotoSmart photo printer is designed to bring low-cost, photographic-quality image printing to the home environment. The HP PhotoSmart photo printer enables importing personal photographs for manipulation and inclusion in various forms of documents and can output them economically without sacrificing the quality of the original image.
The most frequent uses of the HP PhotoSmart photo printer include photo enlargement, cropping, red-eye elimination, scratch removal, replication of snapshots, and the creation of greeting cards and other novelties.
Up to 0.6 min/page – photo draft – 3.95 in x 5.9 in Up to 0.6 min/page – photo fast normal – 3.95 in x 5.9 in Up to 0.9 min/page – photo normal – 3.95 in x 5.9 in Up to 1.3 min/page – photo best – 3.95 in x 5.9 in
Built-in Devices
Preview screen, touch screen
Connectivity Technology
Wired
Max Resolution (Color)
4800 x 1200 dpi
Reviews From Real Customers
This is a great little printer. You can print up to 5×7 photos without it being connected to a computer. And thanks to the built-in hard drive, you can transfer photos from your storage card to the hard drive, then erase your storage card to take more photos.
It also allows you to get creative with a wide array of borders that you can put around your photos as well. You can also purchase a battery for mobile printing and a bluetooth dongle for wireless printing, but honestly, I never had much luck with either of these accessories.
I use it to print name badges at registrations for various events. If you set it for the L size paper — about 3 1/2 inches wide by 5 inches tall — you can print two of the Avery 5390 name badge refills at a time.
This is great for the attendees because they don’t have to wait until you get a full sheet of names (which would be 8 people) to print them. I usually use my big printer to print the organization’s artwork or logo on the name badges,then I tear them into groups of two and use this little printer to print the names on them.
I can also run a single name badge through it if I need to do so. It comes with software for Windows XP, but you can run it on a Windows 7 computer. Simply connect it to your computer via a USB cable, turn on the printer, and Windows will install the necessary software.
In addition to being able to print with it from your computer, you can access the printer’s hard drive or any memory cards that are in it. It accepts a wide array of memory cards, so if you computer does not have a card reader or just takes SD cards, this printer will allow you to access other types of cards.
This is actually the second HP Photosmart 475 I have purchased. My first one is about 15 years old and the printhead is starting to go out on it — the blacks aren’t as crisp and dark as they should be — so I was very happy when I found this one on eBay.
This little photo printer was one of the best HP produced. It is a shame they no longer produce these printers. Most printers today are cheaply made and the inks are way too expensive. HP use to produce extremely high quality products before they joined the ranks of the high-profit cheap printers.
I have had several HP Photosmart 475 printers and they have always worked extremely well. Additionally, I like the ability to print 5×7 pictures.
The contrast in the photos are TERRIBLE! I will attempt to print from my computer once it’s repaired. I have to print from the memory card. Hopefully, that will make the difference. The photos look NOTHING like the advertisement.
Experience powerful portable performance with this 12. 3-inch Google Pixel Slate tablet. Featuring a 12. 3-inch touch-enabled Molecular Display and two front-firing speakers, this tablet delivers detailed visuals and rich, vibrant audio.
This Google Pixel Slate tablet easily handles demanding applications with an Intel Core i7 processor and offers efficient multitasking with 16GB of RAM.
Meet Pixel, a phone by Google. It’s the first phone with the Google Assistant built in. Ask it questions. Tell it to do things. It’s your own personal Google Assistant, always ready to help. The 12. 3MP rear camera and 8MP front camera take stunning photos in low light, bright light, or any light.
And with unlimited storage for your photos and videos, you’ll never have to delete an old memory to make room for a new one. Additional features for Pixel include a 5. 0” AMOLED display, cinematic widescreen 16:9 aspect ratio, Corning Gorilla Glass for durability, and more.
I’ve been a Google phone fanboy for years since the Nexus and every phone thereafter. There were so many things that set these phones apart and the areas where they did lack some bells and whistles were overshadowed by the pure Android experience.
Updates to address bugs were rolled out quickly and when you did need additional support there were always great folks anxious to resolve those issues. Sadly, those days are done. I upgraded my phone and my wife’s to the Pixel 6 and, literally, since day one they were plagued by severe bugs.
My wife’s Pixel 6 restarts every time she accesses the camera. This is a serious issue. The majority of us use our phones for pictures daily. The fact that accessing the camera restarts the phone defeats the purpose of a phone with a great camera.
We went through support and were put through the ringer with suggestions that completely ignored that this was a bug plaguing many Pixel 6 phones based on several Android forums. Google has asked us to send the phone in for two weeks for repairs which is unreasonable given that we have a child with severe medical needs and have multiple calls daily with specialists.
We suggested swapping for a refurbished unit and they agreed but have failed to return four call backs that they claim are necessary for the exchange. Every time we call we hear this is not the experience we strive for and then they proceed to do the exact same dance of going through every troubleshooting step they’ve asked us to do repeatedly only to end with promising us a call back.
It is bad enough that even though we have only had the phone for two months we are going to pay off the contract and go back to Samsung. Google doesn’t care about it’s roots any more and is just happy to push out junk while always having their next device by leaking out details themselves.
Google Pixel 5a. Worst. Cellphone. Ever. Really. I am so totally disappointed I don’t even know where to start! First and foremost I am constantly plugging it in to keep it between 20 and 80% charged and I have it configured to be as efficient as possible so that is NOT the problem.
Then, I have set the photos to minimum weight/quality, whatever you want to call it, and yet they still weigh a lot, sometimes as little as 1. 3 MGB but often times 8 or more megabytes, and these are photos taken one after another so why one weighs so much and another more or less a reasonable size is totally a MYSTERY to me.
There seems to be no rhyme or reason, it’s not the zoom or the image itself, etc. I have looked into every menu for different configurations but the problem persists. Whatever it is, it is making it very difficult to send them in an email message.
Not to mention the fact that Google to use your 15 GB of space in Google Drive to store the photos. This is the first cell phone I’ve ever had that didn’t have a gallery available to me of the photos that I had taken on my phone.
It’s one of the reasons why I bought a phone with 120 GB of space. As far as I’m concerned it’s just a marketing ploy to force you to buy more space on Google Drive. Which is not going to happen because they just forced me to make it inconvenient and download them.
Another thing is their incompatibility with most USBS. They force you to configure a USB into a FAT32 format which is not the typical automatic format, so I had to purchase a new USB with 64 GB of space and format it specifically just uniquely to use in my phone so that I could move files more efficiently.
All it has done is to piss me off that’s the only effect it’s had on me I see absolutely no other advantage to having a FAT32 USB. Then, (and this to me is just UNBELIEVABLE, because it’s an aspect of cell phones since forever, as far as I know) but it is unavailable on this Google pixel 5a: I CANNOT SEE A CALL HISTORY OF EVERY SINGLE CALL MADE TO A CERTAIN NUMBER.
What!?!?!? This is a function that I have used often on every single cell phone I’ve ever had. Google makes it very clumsy to even see the details for the MOST recent call made to a particular number.
But that’s it. Doesn’t matter if it’s a frequently called number, or whether this particular number is listed in your contact agenda list or not!! No, they only show you the details for the LAST call and even at that you have to go through this whole stupid rigmarole to get that information, which seems to me so basic that I just threw my hands up in the air.
I will never ever ever ever again buy a Google product!!! I totally regret having purchased this phone and I am quite sure that I will end up replacing it WAY before I would EVER have done had I bought a phone from another manufacturer.
There are a LOT of other things I don’t like AT ALL about this phone, these are just a few. BLECH. I AM SUPER DISSATISFIED. DO NOT BUY A GOOGLE PIXEL 5A!!! I can’t comment about their other phones. And I will never be able to because I will never have one of them.
Pixel 6 is the only phone I know that won’t charge at all with many existing usb chargers or from the computer USB A port using a converter cable. And it doesn’t come with a PD charger to support this issue is just baffling.
Yes, hidden somewhere in the support/spec page did say it may not work with charging port that doesn’t support PD. But how many people would notice that before buying ? iPhones, Samsung and many other phones will at least charge at a slower speed from a none PD port.
Nope, google’s Pixel 6 will not do that, so if you have an old charger or power bank at home with only USB A output, you are likely screwed, and have to buy new chargers. Which is such a waste and shame.
Google’s QA team sucks at letting this kind of thing passing through and branded it as a special “feature”.
This Brother HL-L6200DW Wireless Mono Laser Printer has a large 520 sheet paper tray capacity and can print up to 46 pages per minute (ppm) making it ideal for professional use. It supports wireless connectivity allowing you to print directly from your computer, laptop or mobile device.
It also has a 1 line, backlit LCD screen which makes the machine easy to use and navigate. – You can print A4 documents using this machine. – It has a printing speed of up to 46 pages per minute (ppm).
– It has a printing resolution of 1200 x 1200 dpi. – The paper tray has a capacity of 520 sheets so you’ll always have paper ready to go. – It supports automatic duplex printing to save on paper. – It has wireless capabilities so you can print even when you’re away from the machine.
– It features a 256 MB in built memory for your convenience. – Please note, a USB cable is not included. – This printer comes with a starter toner pack to get your printer up and running.
I haven’t printed too many pages yet, but the quality seems good enough. Time will tell regarding reliability of the printer. However. The printer came with no installation/use instructions in the box–not even a quick-start guide.
I downloaded the user manual from the manufacturer’s website–but it was close to useless, because it was so difficult to find pertinent info in the manual. The machine was shipped with Russian as the default language on the printer’s info screen.
Nowhere in the user guide could I find instructions on how to change the language to English. When I tried to connect the printer to my wi-fi network, the user manual said to press the printer’s wi-fi button, then follow the instructions on the printer’s info screen.
Since the instructions were in Russian, that was impossible. Only because I’ve connected several other wireless printers in the past was I able to connect this one. Eventually I was able to find out how to change the default language on the printer–but not from the online user manual.
Once I got the printer running, I found that the default paper handling mode was. manual feed. It took another hour of research online to find out how to change to tray feed. Ultimately it took about 5 hours of frustration to get the printer to work properly.
Hopefully it will operate properly for long enough to justify the work I had to put into it to get it to work. In my opinion, a printer sold in the USA should have, as its default language, English! And there should be quick start instructions included in the package that at least tell how to change basic functions of the printer–like language, single-side or duplex printing, and manual or tray paper feed.
My rating is based mostly on the problems I encountered in setting the printer up, not on its operational capabilities.
Though still early to give a full report on the product, the product was easy to set up following the directions. Because of no CD drive in laptop, I had to download software to install. Installation worked without issue.
I selected the WiFi option. At some point I did have to do several firmware updates which took up some time, but not tremendous. Finding and being able to read the fairly small password to install the firmware was inconvenient.
Make sure you write it down because you will need to provide it in the future for additional firmware updates that I have already been prompted to do. I am guessing full installation and testing out the print job took 45 minutes or so.
But I tend to read most everything and am pretty methodical. The print quality seems fine and is what I was looking for. It will be interesting to see how long the initial print drum lasts for it is just a starter drum.
You know, sort of like buying a new car but not getting a full tank of gas. At the moment, I am satisfied with the printer.
I bought and received this color laser printer with scanner and fax capability and am impressed with the features and the quality of print that it delivers. The printer supports Apple AirPrint which allows iPads and iPhones to access directly and print photos or documents.
Brother has an app for iOS and iMac that makes it simple to select photos and documents plus adjust settings for the scanner/printer. One of the key features is that you can do double sided printing which saves paper.
The paper loading tray allows all the way up to legal paper loading. Brother also has an app for Windows PC that makes it easy to select and control documents and adjust printer settings as well as scan and import documents as pictorial or optical character recognition (OCR) media.
The print speed is very fast and the quality of the color and resolution are incredible. I Definitely made a good choice when selecting this printer.
Meet Pixel XL, a phone by Google. It’s your own personal Google Assistant, always ready to help. The 12. 3 MP rear camera and 8 MP front camera take stunning photos in low light, bright light, or any light.
And with unlimited storage for your photos and videos, you’ll never have to delete an old memory to make room for a new one. Additional features for Pixel XL include a 5. 5″ AMOLED display, cinematic widescreen 16:9 aspect ratio, Corning Gorilla Glass for durability, and more.
I loved this phone. I told everyone I knew to buy a Pixel. It was my favorite phone I have ever owned until Thanksgiving day. I was at Universal Studios to watch my senior daughter perform in what may be her very last and only(thanks to covid) high school dance performance.
An hour before the performance, my camera suddenly stopped working. When I would try to open the app and nothing would happen. I frantically tried all of the trouble shooting steps. I even installed a new camera app.
Nothing. Then, I read an article on Forbes and Reddit that explained that this is a huge problem with some Pixels after the latest Android update. What a disappointment at such a terrible time. I didn’t have my camera for a once in a lifetime moment with my daughter or for the rest of a very special trip.
The whole reason I bought this phone was for the camera features. This really couldn’t have happened at a worse time. I’m very disappointed with Google because apparently this happened with the Pixel 2s and there still isn’t a fix.
They are replacing some phones out of warranty only to get another phone with the same issue. We are home from our trip now and I will begin the process of getting this replaced. Huge disappointment.
The Google Pixel XL is a marvelous cell phone, but little it isn’t. It is a nice lightweight mini tablet with a hugh almost 3. 5A-H battery. The Pixel uses an AMOLED type screen, and as such continuously displayed bright images will wear down the individual LED’s, causing a retro image to remain as an inverse when a white screen is displayed.
It is similar to the retro images your eye sees after looking at a very bright image for a while. It is only a problem on white screens. There are essentially two variations that exist for US use: Those that came from the Google Play store, or its equivalent, and those that came from Verizon.
at a discount. The model numbers, and physicality of either is absolutely identical. As far as I can tell, the only real difference is in a database that Google hosts of Verizon models. When the user opens up the Developer options, and selects the Unlock Boot Loader option on a google playstore phone, the phone will get onto the internet by way of WIFI, and it will check the database at Google, and if the IMEI is on it, as a Google playstore phone, it will allow the boot loader to be unlocked.
If this is attempted with a Verizon phone, the option to unlock the boot loader will be grayed out. Be warned, once a verizon phone, always a verizon phone. The phone will be automatically unlocked for GSM carriers after the contract is finished profitably, but it will never be unlocked into being a Google playstore phone.
It will never have its bootloader freed of the verizon apron strings. There is a way of hacking the phone (for now), but it would be better if all Pixel owners would mount a campaign with Verizon to have the curse lifted.
Otherwise it is a fantastic phone. but the Verizon model should be 1/2 the price of the playstore model because of the inconvenience it represents. I run LineagOS on mine, after hacking the phone to unlock the boot loader, but I am forever reminded of what I have done whenever I start the phone, or try to use a secured application like Google Pay, and find it is forbidden.
The Google PixelXL is a wonderful phone, but you might want to avoid the phone if it was provided from Verizon. Be warned, those.
Myself I prefer Android over any of the other options out there. Reason being is that there’s a lot more customerization available. Plus you don’t have to succumb to apples insane pricing structure. The pixel has excellent storage and services.
The display is beautiful and if you’re an Android user already you won’t be disappointed. I was glad that I upgraded to the pixel myself.
Epson S041257 Matte Paperheavyweightletter Size Heavyweight ultra-smooth bright white with a matte finish Perfect for B&W photos enlargements and cherished photos Print favorite photos on a Non-Glare Finish Resists fading up to 72 years+ Guaranteed to work with ALL Ink Jet Printers Matte Paper Heavyweight delivers long-lasting photographs with a matte finish.
With its heavyweight bright white ultra-smooth finish this paper is perfect for non-glare photographs craft projects and signage. Also available in borderless sizes. Note: Actual print stability and longevity will vary according to image display conditions light intensity humidity atmospheric conditions and post-printing treatments.
Epson does not guarantee stability or longevity. For maximum print life display all prints under glass or lamination or properly store them. Fulfilled by UnbeatableSale Inc.
TO CLEAR UP CONFUSION RE: WHICH EPSON PRESENTATION PAPER IS PRINTABLE ON BOTH SIDES: (Hope this helps others – I bought the wrong one!) First, please know both of these Epson Presentation Papers are for inkjet printers only.
Per enclosed instructions, using this paper with laser printers or copiers may damage your equipment. CHOICE #1: PRINTABLE ON 1 SIDE ONLY (This product): S041257: EPSON Premium Presentation Paper Matte / Matte Paper Heavy Weight, 50 Sheets, 8 1/2 x 11 (Code on my box is C13S041257) 44 lb.
Box does not state anywhere if paper is printable on one or both sides. Instructions inside box: “The whiter side is the printable side. You cannot print on the reverse side. ” and “Printing on the reverse side may damage the printer.
” CHOICE #2: PRINTABLE ON BOTH SIDES: S041568: EPSON Premium Presentation Paper Matte 50 sheets, 8 1/2 x 11 47 lb. Box on front states: “Double-Sided” Tip. To determine which side of S041257 is printable: Both sides of the paper may look the same depending on the kind of lighting you have (as happened to me.
) If this happens, try viewing the paper under a different kind of lighting, this will hopefully reveal which side is “whiter”. (Under outdoor light the difference became obvious for me). Know also the whiter printable side feels a slight bit smoother than the other side.
Nice paper. The 1 sided 44 lb S041257 is a good thickness for printing custom greeting cards and goes through my Canon printer fine (fed through back). Prints nice. I wanted to print on both sides, though.
Will keep S041257 paper for one side printing projects and buy the more expensive S041568 for printing on both sides.
I make it a point to ask a Staples employee whether this paper was suitable for printing a two-sided document, and he assured me it was. Clearly the employee had no real product knowledge: the paper has a decidedly yellow cast on one side, bright white on the other.
Press of time left me with no alternative but to use the paper, with hugely disappointing results. The reasons why the paper’s packaging doesn’t clearly state that it’s suitable for printing on two sides is that it ISN’T.
Ridiculously overpriced product given that it doesn’t allow for two-sided printing. Nearly empty shelves are a chronic Covid-period disappointment, but especially when the only available product is so inferior.
After show a sales consultant at the Farmington store a sample of paper that I had used previously, she led me to a similar product. The closest they had in stock. It worked even better than the other product.
I was printing business logos and some had large blocks of color which smudged on the old paper but not on the new. The printer then continued to print ink where it did not belong on subsequent logos.
The PIXMA MG7120 is the ultimate Wireless Inkjet Photo All-In-One printer delivering superior photo printing performance and incredible versatility. The Canon MG7120 PIXMA Inkjet Printer/Copier/Scanner prints gorgeous, borderless photos up to 8.
5 inches by 11 inches and sharp documents with amazing quality. Maximum color dpi is a remarkable 9600 x 2400 with 1pl technology, six individual ink tanks, including gray ink for beautiful detail in your color and black and white photos.
With its advanced media handling capabilities, the MG7120 also allows you to print on CDs and DVDs, as well as load paper into the front of the printer, so you’re always ready to print. Its beautiful 3.
5 inch touchscreen LCD lets you easily view, select and edit your images for simple computer-free printing, while the Intelligent Touch System allows you to effortlessly operate the printer with beautiful backlit buttons – and only the buttons you need illuminate!.
Worked good for about a week and then said it had print ready to print and to cancel the print. Could not cancel print. Could not get get answer from Cannon or YouTube. Bought a laser printer. This is was the second Cannon ink jet that failed due to soft wear failure.
My other one stopped in the middle of printing and said it had a incorrect print head.
I have had this printer for several months and am fairly pleased with it. The few concerns I have had are: 1. Too easy to shut off while scanning. As there is no automatic feeder on the machine, you have to open and shut the top door manually in order to insert and remove documents.
It is too easy to accidentally brush your hand over the smooth on/off “button”, which is on top immediately below the door. I have had the machine suddenly shut off in the middle of a scan, and have to wait and then turn it on again to continue the scan, and hope that nothing was lost.
2. Also, the lower paper tray seems very flimsy and slightly wobbly when re-inserting after filling. You have to insert it very straight, or it may catch and not go in properly. 3. The exit door for printed documents flips open automatically when printing.
When you shut it again afterward, if you go too fast, it will catch the plastic support arm that flips out with the paper exit door, and might possibly break. Be very careful. Other than that, I am pleased with the machine and have no other issues.
I would recommend it as long as you take your time with it and be very gentle with it.
I purchased this printer to replace my Epson Artisan 710 which had lost segments in the printhead due to clogged ports. The A710’s software for printing to CD/DVD is far better than that which comes with the MG7120.
The A710’s is limited only by the users artistic capabilities: you can place any graphic anywhere on the label, any text including text art anywhere on the label. In other words, you have full design capabilities.
The software for the MG7120 doesn’t provide that kind of ability. Text can be placed anywhere but you can’t use any form of text art. Graphics cannot be placed just anywhere, the user must pick a location based upon one of many ‘layouts’ provided.
In order for me to place a QR code on a label, I had to add it to a jpg image using Gimp 2 and then exporting it as a jpg file and then using that file as my background. Other than the short comings of the CD/DVD printing software the printer functions nicely.
I haven’t as yet had the opportunity to print any photographs but I am looking forward to it.
Multitask with split-screen functionality. Plus, collaborate with built-in Google docs, sheets and slides. Connect your monitor, mouse, and keyboard to turn your Pixel Slate into a powerful workstation.
Pixel Imprint lets you quickly and securely sign in with the touch of a finger.
Smart, powerful, helpful. And less than you think. Meet the Google Pixel 6a, the more affordable, super fast, and secure Google phone¹. It’s powered by Google Tensor for fast performance. And, with an Adaptive Battery that can last over ²⁴ hours², top-rated security, and water resistance³, it’s designed around you and your busy lifestyle, inside and out.
I’m been using Google Pixel phones since version 3 and this 6a is a replacement for a Pixel 4 that decided to come unglued. That’s right – unglued. Google it. It’s a thing for the Pixel 4 phones. So I’m really hopeful that 2 years from now this phone will NOT suffer the same fate.
I’m an iPhone user, but my day job requires me to work with Android phones as well so I’m always flipping back and forth and the Pixel is the Android device I always come back to. One of the best features of this phone is that because it is made by Google, it runs pure Android, which means you don’t have to wait for an OEM (cough.
Samsung) to always get the latest versions of Android OS. In the two years I’ve used the Pixel 4 it’s never been more than 14 days behind the latest major version and monthly security patch version. So while Google continues to struggle with getting other OEMs to update the OS on Android this is never a problem with the Pixel phones.
If you need to always be running the latest Android OS like I do for my day job, Pixel phones should definitely be a purchase for you. Being used to the Pixel 4, the 6a’s almost full inch of extra screen space seems tiny on paper but looks amazing in person.
I’m a Fortnite player on Android and have been very impressed with how much better Fornite runs on the 6a compared with the 4 but the larger usable screen space for apps and games is the feature I notice the most.
The pinhole camera took some adjustment to get used to and I do like the fingerprint unlock. The form factor of the 6a is easy to hold for long gaming sessions being slightly more blocky (if that’s even a word) than the 4.
On the software front, Android continues to add innovative and useful features such as the new magic eraser feature for the camera where you can remove unwanted objects quickly as easily from the phone and the adaptive battery and extreme battery saver features do allow you to skip a day or two of remembering to plug the phone in to charge and with Android 13 around the corner, this Beta’s are already available for install on this phone.
Overall this is a solid Android device and so far the build quality is far superior to the previous Pixel devices.
If your phone is less than 2 years old, you may want to skip this as an upgrade. If you’re still rocking a Pixel3 or older, read on. The Pixel 6 series rocks Google’s new Tensor chip, their first attempt at an in house system on a chip (SOC).
While it works, there is definitely an early adopter tax going on. Many features such as the under the screen finger print sensor, live translation, or even system responsiveness are not on par with many other chips.
I found myself often going back to my Pixel 4a when I needed to get tasks done quickly and for my daily driver. Google did release a system update that helped with some of the issues, but I suspect that we won’t be getting full system performance out of the Tensor chip until Android 13 is released.
The phone itself is well built and feels good in the hand. I like not having the indent in the back of the case which means that any case I purchase for the phone no longer needs to have the cutout. Speaking of cutout , I do not like the position of the camera cutout on this phone.
Top center is prime real estate on the screen both in vertical and horizontal mode, and the camera clutters it up. The previous top left corner on the 4 and 5 felt less obtrusive and I found myself forgetting it was there most of the time.
Battery life is great on the Tensor chip, but I wonder how much of that will change once the chip is really unleashed. As it stands, even under moderate to heavy gaming, I was still getting a full day of use out of the phone.
Given that this still only includes an 18W charging port, this is critical, as you’ll likely be plugging this in over night and using the adaptive charge to keep your battery in tip top shape. As far as software/SoC features go, Google is touting magic eraser as their big new gimmick and honestly I wasn’t impressed.
Anyone that has used Photoshop has seen how digital erasing works and I found the results to be the same or less impressive than using a desktop. Unless what you’re erasing is surrounded by a surface with lots of random patterns, such as clouds, the pictures look very obviously edited, something that most desktop apps do better.
I also found that through copying the new photos app apk file to my Pixel 4a, I received the same results, so this is more of a software gimmick than a SoC feature. Speaking of photos, I really did not see an upgrade in visual quality on the 6a vs.
previous Pixel models. Yes, the 6a can do 240fps @ 1080p and 30fps @ 4k in video recording, but the picture quality itself is not much better. Pair this with the same 6GB of RAM as we’ve seen for many years and the fact that Google killed the headphone jack while the 5a retained it while also being water resistant and the used market is looking a lot better than the new market right now.
To calculate pixel per inch for printing, you need to know the total number of pixels in the image and the size of the print in inches. To find the total number of pixels in the image, you need to multiply the width and height of the image in pixels.
Once you have the total number of pixels in the image, you can divide that number by the size of the print in inches to find pixel per inch.
How can I change the pixel per inch for printing?
As the optimal pixel per inch (PPI) setting for printing depends on the specific printer, paper, and image being used. However, as a general rule of thumb, a PPI setting of 300 is typically considered ideal for high-quality printing.
What are the benefits of changing the pixel per inch for printing?
Some benefits of changing the pixel per inch for printing include increasing the clarity of the print, reducing the amount of ink needed, and improving the overall quality of the print.
Are there any disadvantages of changing the pixel per inch for printing?
There are some disadvantages of changing the pixel per inch for printing. These can include decreased print quality, banding or lines in your print, and jagged or fuzzy edges.
How do I know if I need to change the pixel per inch for printing?
If you need to change the pixel per inch for printing, you can use an image editing program to resize the image.
What are some common problems with pixel per inch for printing?
The most common problem with pixel per inch for printing is that it can cause images to appear blurry or jagged. This is because when an image is printed, the printer needs to interpolate (or guess) the color and position of each pixel.
If the printer doesn’t have enough information to work with (too few pixels per inch), it can’t create a sharp, clean image.
How can I troubleshoot pixel per inch for printing problems?
If you are having issues with the pixel per inch (ppi) for printing, there are a few things that you can do to troubleshoot the problem.
First, you will want to make sure that you have the correct ppi set for your printer. You can do this by checking the printer settings or looking up the specific printer model online. Once you have the correct ppi set, you should then check the settings in your printing software.
Make sure that the software is set to use the correct ppi for your printer.
If you are still having issues, you can try changing the DPI of your image. This can be done in most image editing software. Simply open your image, go to the ‘Image’ menu, and select ‘Image Size’. From here, you can change the DPI (pixels per inch) to a higher or lower setting.
A higher DPI will result in a higher quality image, but it will also take up more disk space. A lower DPI will result in a lower quality image, but it will take up less disk space.
Finally, if you are still having issues, you can try printing at a lower resolution. This can be done in your printing software. Simply open the ‘File’ menu and select ‘Print’. From here, you can change the ‘Resolution’ setting to a lower number.
This will result in a lower quality image, but it is more likely to print correctly.
Conclusion
The pixel per inch (ppi) for printing is the number of pixels in an image that are printed in one inch. The higher the ppi, the higher the resolution of the image and the more detailed it will be.