- HP Deskjet
-
Deskjet is a brand name for inkjet printers manufactured by Hewlett-Packard. These printers range from small domestic to large industrial models, although the largest models in the range have generally been dubbed DesignJet. The Macintosh-compatible equivalent was branded as the Deskwriter and competed with Apple's StyleWriter.
The HP DeskJet 500 printer has four built-in typefaces and is compatible with TrueType fonts in Windows. The HP DeskJet 500 printer prints on plain paper with a print speed of up to three pages per minute.[citation needed]
The Hewlett Packard 500 was one of the first popular Black and White Inkjet printers. It created letters and patterns by spraying tiny drops of ink from a cartridge against paper.
HP developed thermal inkjet technology in 1979 and launched their ThinkJet in 1984, with color following in 1987 thanks to the PaintJet. Launched in February 1988, the HP Deskjet was the world’s first single-sheet, desktop printer. Originally priced at $995, the reliable HP Deskjet featured an average speed of just 2 pages per minute. It was the least expensive non-impact printer on the market at the time it was introduced, when most small non-laser printers were still impact-based and laser printers remained relatively expensive. The first color DeskJet, the 500C, launched in 1991. It featured swapable print cartridges, one black, the other three-color; the unused cartridge was to be stored in a "garage" to avoid drying out.
Over time, through innovation and large scale production, the price was brought down considerably, being less than half by 1993, by which time inkjet technology and color printing were increasingly popular with consumers and DeskJets had both black and three-color cartridges installed simultaneously, starting with the 550C model.
Today, the HP Deskjet has transformed into a high-speed, lightweight printer with a multitude of features from wireless connectivity to intuitive software and hardware installation for quick and easy setup.
DeskJets are unusual amongst consumer-level inkjet printers in featuring an inexpensive, disposable print head built into the cartridge itself. This allows consistent print quality since the head is replaced frequently, along with the ink. Under some circumstances it may also reduce the need for frequent head-cleaning cycles, which consume ink. This business model of proprietary cartridges has proven very profitable for HP.
The DeskJet developed into HP's current DeskJet, DesignJet, PhotoSmart and Professional Series printer lines, all of which are based on thermal inkjet technology. The latest photo printers use several shades of ink to produce a wide color range.
See also
External links
Hewlett-Packard Company founders HP: William Hewlett • David Packard • Compaq: Rod Canion • Jim Harris • Bill Murto
(HP and Compaq Merged on May 3, 2002)[1]Board of Directors Raymond J. Lane (Executive Chairman) • Marc Andreessen • Lawrence T. Babbio, Jr. • Sari M. Baldauf • Rajiv L. Gupta • John H. Hammergren • G. Kennedy Thompson • Gary M. Reiner • Patricia F. Russo • Dominique Senequier • Shumeet Banerji • Ann Livermore • Meg WhitmanExecutive Officers Meg Whitman • Todd Bradley • Cathie Lesjak • Dave Donatelli • Vyomesh Joshi • Michael J. Holston • Marty Homlish • Tracy Keogh • Bill Veghte • John Visentin • Jan Zadak • Prith BanerjeeComputer hardware products Compaq Presario • Business Desktops • EliteBook • ProBook • Integrity • NonStop • ProLiant • Pavilion • TouchSmart • Mini • HP Envy • Slate 500Consumer electronics and accessories Other divisions 3com • ArcSight • Indigo Digital Press • Scitex • Insight Software • Mercury • ProCurve • HP Enterprise Services • TOWER SoftwareSoftware Discontinued products Compaq Deskpro • Compaq Evo • Compaq Portable • Compaq ProLinea • Compaq ProSignia • Compaq SystemPro • Jornada • Omnibook • iPod+HP • VoodooPC • TouchPadClosed Division HP CEOs List of HP CEO's in Order • Co-founders William Hewlett and David Packard • John A. Young • Lewis E. Platt • Carly Fiorina • Mark Hurd • Léo Apotheker • Meg WhitmanAssets HP Garage • HP LabsSee also References Categories:- Non-impact printing
- Hewlett-Packard products
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.