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It's been years since Lexmark first decided to defeat the users who began to reuse spent bubble jet cartridges by injecting them with cheap ink using a hypodermic syringe. They did it by sensing when the cartridge was low on fluid and burning out a fuse in the cartridge itself, which prevented it from woking after being refilled for re-used. Unfortunately, their sensing algorithm made inoperable cartridges that had 25-30% of the fluid still in them. Lexmark's sales model was patterened after Rockerfella's lamp model: sell the lamp for practically nothing and charge a lot for the kerosene to fuel it. After that fiasco their sales plummeted. Cannon still tried that trick despite the bad press for Lexmark.
I owned a Cannon printer at the time and, as luck would have it, that printer failed. Did I consider Cannon printers when I went looking for a new printer? Nope. Epson followed Cannon's lead, as did many other inkjet printer makers, and that forced me to look at monotone laser printers. I bought a Samsung ML-1210 laser for around $200, IIRC, and replaced it with my current printer, the HP LaserJet P1606dn, an awesome duplex printer. The toner/drum for it costs $70 and gives around 3,000 pages of print. I bought this printer in 2010 for around $200, IIRC, and I am on my second toner drum.
IF I need to buy another printer it will be a color laser. Probably this one, or one of its children:
https://www.amazon.com/HP-Laserjet-W..._title_ce?th=1
It's been years since Lexmark first decided to defeat the users who began to reuse spent bubble jet cartridges by injecting them with cheap ink using a hypodermic syringe. They did it by sensing when the cartridge was low on fluid and burning out a fuse in the cartridge itself, which prevented it from woking after being refilled for re-used. Unfortunately, their sensing algorithm made inoperable cartridges that had 25-30% of the fluid still in them. Lexmark's sales model was patterened after Rockerfella's lamp model: sell the lamp for practically nothing and charge a lot for the kerosene to fuel it. After that fiasco their sales plummeted. Cannon still tried that trick despite the bad press for Lexmark.
I owned a Cannon printer at the time and, as luck would have it, that printer failed. Did I consider Cannon printers when I went looking for a new printer? Nope. Epson followed Cannon's lead, as did many other inkjet printer makers, and that forced me to look at monotone laser printers. I bought a Samsung ML-1210 laser for around $200, IIRC, and replaced it with my current printer, the HP LaserJet P1606dn, an awesome duplex printer. The toner/drum for it costs $70 and gives around 3,000 pages of print. I bought this printer in 2010 for around $200, IIRC, and I am on my second toner drum.
IF I need to buy another printer it will be a color laser. Probably this one, or one of its children:
https://www.amazon.com/HP-Laserjet-W..._title_ce?th=1
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