Printers - Technology for the worst, as usual!

Published 30 June 05 09:22 PM | dwalker 

We used to use an HP OfficeJet G85 (paid $500+) until it seemed as though it was jamming a lot. So we bought a cheap Lexmark X6170 (paid $200ish) and it does the same thing! Well, at least it's half the size, even if it suffers the same unbearable problem!

My wife made an excellent point the other day wishing they'd go back to using the perforated paper that was the norm several years back with dot matrix printers!

Fewer jams and a LOT fewer refills!!

Don't get me started on ink.

I'd like to compare those prices to oil/gasoline prices any day!

What's it take to get a STANDARD going?

Oh, but the printer companies couldn't actually make any money.

Printer cartridges should be like floppy disks and on their way out with something newer and better by now!

That's what a STANDARD ink cartridge would bring about -- change!

Since they couldn't make any money off the regular old ink jet cartridges any more it would force them to actually start developing some newer technology.

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About dwalker

David Walker has over 15 years experience in application development with over 50% of that employed as a consultant with companies such as: Texaco, Bank of Oklahoma, Winner Communications (ESPN.com) and IBM Global Services. At the age of 14, he began his application development ambitions with a Commodore 64, BASIC, and a 300 baud modem. Even at that early age, he primarily focused on two specific application types: multi-user communities and database applications.

His hunger to learn as much as possible about development lead him through courses such as DBase III, DBase IV, Pascal, C, C++, Java, and several in UNIX. He started his development career first doing heavy processing with Access and VBA, then moved on to VB 3, Oracle, and Delphi. Visual Basic was one environment that remained constant for many years, including his very first .NET projects performed in Visual Basic.NET.

After working several years on very high end internal Corporate applications, the consultant company he was working for, sought out his ideas for actual software products that could be packaged and sold. He had already developed several prototypes of a dynamic portal application, before portals even became popular, so this became the logic decision and he became the Director of Product Development. Under his direction, a team of developers and graphic artists, took a skinning approach before that become popular, and completed the core portal application, and continued on to developer 15+ add-on modules, including things such as: Help Desk Ticket Systems, Change Control, Records Management, Human Resources, and many more applications. Eventually, it spun off into it's own separate company as KnowledgeGEAR, a complete intranet in the box solution.

Having worked as a consultant, he has had a experience with a very wide range of applications and architectures, at one time, even converting several Fox Pro and GW-Basic applications to VB 6 and ASP. His early training of Unix and the C language and years of experience with JavaScript, lead him very quickly to C#, where he has remained focused ever since.

He is the current President of the Tulsa Developers .NET user group.. He has been an MCP since 2003 and MCAD and MCSD since 2005. He is currently pursuing his MCDBA and then on to MCSE.

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