• MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
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      15 hours ago

      Why thermal? Seems odd, but alright.

      I recommend laser for just about everyone.

      Don’t print much? Get a laser. Otherwise your ink will dry out and you’ll have to get new ink every time you want to print.

      Print a lot? Laser. Super reliable, can do tens of thousands of sheets before there’s a problem, maybe more.

      In fact, the only time I’d recommend an ink printer is for color accurate work like photo printing, and if you’re not using photo paper for it, then there’s not really much of a point, is there?

      I used to think bubble jet/ink jet was the shit, then I started working in IT professionally and discovered the truth.

      Just buy a laser printer folks. Don’t bother with all the rest of this shit. If you want/need inkjet, then you already know you need it and why. If you’re not sure, get a laser. You’ll pay wayyyyyy less on materials to keep it running

      • boonhet@lemm.ee
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        11 hours ago

        Don’t print much? Get a laser. Otherwise your ink will dry out and you’ll have to get new ink every time you want to print.

        I’ve literally never had this happen and I print so infrequently that if I have to buy a new cartridge, I’ll just… not print at home anymore. Is it really that common?

        I’m not going to recommend inkjets to anyone though. My recommendation anno 2025 is don’t buy a printer if you can get by without one.

        • MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
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          7 hours ago

          Quick story, I bought a bubble jet printer for college in the mid 2000s, with all the fixings.

          I set it up and got it working and promptly never used it. Almost all of my courses allowed either digital submissions or provided the printouts you actually needed, like course work that you would fill out. So I basically wasted my money, especially considering I could always use the large format printers at the school for like 5 cents per page.

          Anyways. I did a few test prints and everything was fine and I got to work in college. Almost every time I needed the printer in order to actually print something, I more or less had to go and buy new ink. At first I was like “I guess I printed more than I thought?” But it kept happening. I would print maybe twice a year. Eventually I stopped using it as a printer (it was a multifunction, so I kept it as a scanner), and just used the printers at school. It was cheaper, considering the fact that printer ink is worth more by volume than basically any other substance; and while I was only buying a small amount, maybe $20 or so (adjusted for inflation, this is probably like $50 today) each time, it was a lot for a broke college student.

          After college, I picked up a random laser printer, the printer cost more up front (I got another multifunction, but this time with a network port because I’m a nerd). I basically never bought any toner for it, given how little I had to print year over year, and it always was ready to go. I had it for years until a new windows version (maybe the OG Windows 10? Maybe Windows 8/8.1) made the drivers stop working and the manufacturer wouldn’t make drivers for that model that worked with the new requirements from Windows… I did a little print server for a bit to give it some more longevity, but ultimately it had to go to the IT storage in the sky.

          • boonhet@lemm.ee
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            1 hour ago

            Oh my 10+ year old printer is still on its original set of cartridges, or maybe they’ve had at most one replacement set.

            The previous one, which also lasted several years but had to be replaced because there were no Windows 7 drivers. That had I believe one set of replacement cartridges over like 6 or 7 years.

            I have no idea what the hell is going on, it’s like I’ve been blessed with top 0.0001% printer luck as a stat. But like I said, I don’t intend to tempt faith and try again if this one needs new cartridges or it stops working altogether. If in a few years we discover that in this (or worse, next) decade kids STILL need to print a bunch of bullshit for school instead of emailing or submitting things via like moodle or something, it’ll probably be a laser and probably Brother, as it seems this article was a bit hasty and apparently they’re sitll good?

      • T156@lemmy.world
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        14 hours ago

        Dot matrix is also an option, if they neither want to bother with toner, nor inkjet.

    • T156@lemmy.world
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      14 hours ago

      Any particular reason for going thermal? Personally, I’d recomnend against them, since thermal paper is coated with BPA, and that can come off and might have health effects if ingested.

    • thermal_shock@lemmy.world
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      18 hours ago

      My client has a few dozen zebras. Reliable, but cost a little more up front. Some of theirs are 10+ years old, prints thousands of inventory labels a month off each one at each site.