Case Surf.com
Index -> About Us -> Add Your Link -> Privacy of Info -> Terms & Conditions -> Submit Article
Search:   
 

Post Launch Laundry List - Did You Know You Should Have One? Part Deux

With your autoresponders on set and forget, and your product flying off your virtual shelves you'd t ... - John Hostler
 

MP3 Players -- Many Capable Underdogs vs. the 800-lb. Gorilla

Although the Apple Ipod reigns supreme, there are many capable alternatives at a more attractive pri ... - Zed Hayden
 

Spending More Money Than You Make In Your Online Business?

Have you been lured into online business and internet marketing with promises of the gold you will f ... - Swaminathan Viramani
 
 

$1 Million in Google AdSense Earnings

They are calling him the million dollar man. Jason Calacanis recently revealed in his blog that he i ... - Scott J Adams
 

Auto Responders: The Marketers Magic Trick

Imagine if John (an avid poker player) visits your website. You sell a book that helps him improve h ... - Eddie Machaalani
 

Make Money From Forums

How would you like to talk about things of interest to you, and make money doing it? If you have a w ... - Steven Gillman
 

Four Methods for Making Money from Your Computer

There are a number of ways that you can be making money form your computer. The unending potential o ... - Charles Fuchs
 

Ready for a Career Change? Travel the Microsoft Certification Route

Are you dissatisfied with your job? Do you want to find a new one or at least make a move to another ... - James Croydon
 
 

Index » Computers & Software » Hardware Peripherals
 

Inkjet Printers Are Rubbish Literally

 
Author: David Carter
 

Inkjet printers are rubbish, and I defy anyone to say different. In the past three years I have bought and discarded eight different inkjet printers, and they all had two things in common. Firstly, they were expensive to run, and secondly, they stopped working within eighteen months of purchase. The first time it happened, I rang technical support. After negotiating the minefield of "press three", "press five", "press six", and "An operator will be with you in a moment", I eventually spoke to a helpful young man. After an hour of trying to fix the problem online he said: "It's a mystery isn't it, why don't you parcel it up and post it off to me?" I didn't of course, it wasn't worth the carriage costs, or my time. All I wanted was a machine that worked. So I did what everyone else does, I threw it away, and went out and bought a new machine.

Think back fifteen years to the era of the dot matrix printer. Those chunky beasts would run all day long with never a hiccup, all night too if we asked them. Some of those musclely machines would run all year on one 4.95 ribbon, just so long as we carried out a little bit of ribbon refurbishment. Those machines gave the impression they would run until the end of time, providing they received a little TLC every aeon or two.

Then one day, almost overnight, the era of the dot matrix was over. Along came the so called intelligent printer. Intelligent my backside! We were seduced by their almost silence, and promises of sexy colour pictures. The time of the dominatrix was over and they were consigned to the chasm of doom, a slight Freudian slip perhaps, but you get the picture.

A couple of weeks ago I was so fed up with the sight of dead inkjet printers cluttering up my office and home, I loaded them all into the car and headed off for the local rubbish dump. On the way there I had to pass that giant computer retailer, you know the one, they are always located on the edge of town, and advertise almost daily on television. Their ads usually feature grinning customers and smug staff. I was tempted to dump the dead printers on their forecourt, together with a card saying: "Why don't you sell kit that works?" But I didn't have a suitable pen, nor a piece of card, so I pressed on past their garish plastic signs, to the public dump.

At the tip these days everything is sorted for reclamation purposes. I asked the operative where computer equipment should be left. "Round the other side of the skip mate," he replied smiling, and I grabbed my first armful of dead printers, and set off in that direction. What did I find? Three chunky monitors, the kind of thing that no one wants any more, and two smart looking tower systems, the kind of gals you'd be happy to take home to your mother.

To the right of that, was a heap of inkjet printers. The pile was taller than me, and looked as if a tipper wagon had just arrived and dumped them in a huge mound. And they weren't all ancient jobs either, for sprinkled amongst them were many modern pieces of kit that looked as if that same grinning retailer had sold them within the last few weeks. So you see, inkjet printers really are rubbish, literally so. If you don't believe me, pay a visit to your local rubbish dump, and I'll wager you don't have to search long to find them.

So why do we put up with this? We wouldn't buy a car, and throw it away after a few months because it doesn't work. Nor a compact disc player, or a camcorder, a cooker, a coffee making machine, a camera, or even a kettle. The answer of course is cost. We have come to see them as disposable, throwaway items, like an empty can of shaving cream, or a spent ballpoint pen, and sometimes they last about as long. Surely that can't be right? So why don't we take them back? Probably because we are so concerned that that smart Alec salesman in the grinning retailers will make out we don't know what we are doing. He'll probably say: "I could sort that out in five minutes flat, if only I had the time. You'll have to leave it with me and come back in a week or two". We just couldn't be bothered, we only want a piece of kit that works. It's what we have paid for after all.

Yesterday I visited a friend of mine who runs an inkjet refill store. He was telling me he is having continual trouble with big corporations threatening him with legal action for refilling their cartridges. More power to his elbow I say, anything that halves our huge printing costs must be worth supporting. Whilst I was there, an old guy came in. He had recently bought an expensive computer system from that famous retailer who only sells by mail order, you know the one I mean. Part of the system was an expensive colour printer and the cartridges had quickly expired. My friend advised him that new replacement cartridges, colour and black and white, would cost him 65 notes. Alternatively, he'd refill the same cartridges for 39.00. The old guy almost had a coronary on the spot. I think he was expecting to pay about a tenner. "I am not paying that!" he snapped, "I'll throw the printer away first", and I couldn't help smiling and imagining that brand new printer perched on the summit of that heap.

I have dumped all my inkjet printers now, and switched to laser. I am sticking to black and white too, because they are reliable and relatively cheap to run, and my friend will refill them for not too much dough. You don't see discarded laser printers at the dump, I wonder why?

So I got round to thinking, does everyone else have dead inkjet printers cluttering up their offices, garages, and homes? Do you? And if you do, why not take five minutes out from your busy schedule, and email me with your experiences to do with inkjet printers. I thought I might compile a record, a kind of Domesday Book of inkjet printers everywhere, and I will acknowledge every message. You can contact me at supalife@aol.com, and I look forward to hearing your tales, good, bad or indifferent, I am not biased, perhaps there are some satisfied customers out there, somewhere.

But in my humble opinion, inkjet printers really are rubbish. Visit the local dump if you don't believe me, and we shouldn't have to put up with this, should we? It's time something was done about it, don't you think?

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Is There Any Money On Over Saturated Markets?
 
How To Get Free Advertising By Giving Away Online Content
 
How to Choose an Internet Marketing Mentor
 
DXInOne - Issue #2 - We Have Enough DXInOne Marketers Already, Right?
 
Google Adsense for Content Websites
 
Preprinted Bar Code Labels
 
IT & ERP Consulting: Industry Trends
 
Speech Technology Predictions for 2006
 
Create Bar Codes
 
CTRL + ALT + DEL, The $100 Handcranked Computer
 
 
 
Add Url
 

Computers & Software

News & Media

Sports & Adventure

Jobs & Careers

Academics & Education

Science & Space

Creative Arts

Self Help

Indoor Games

Hygiene & Health

Fashion & Relationships

Companies & Business

Estate & Realty

Society & Communities

Food & Recipe

Travel & Accommodation

Government & Politics

Children & Teens

Home Family & Garden

Medicine & Treatment

Online Shopping

Finance & Banking

Recreation

Automotive

 
Index -> Privacy of Info -> Terms & Conditions  
Copyright © 2008 www.casesurf.com All Rights Reserved.