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-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
HP PSC 2355 all-in-one printer

By Jeffrey Fuchs, Special to ZDNet
March 29, 2005
URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/reviews/hardware/printersscanners/soa/HP-PSC-2355-all-in-one-printer/0,139023422,139186278,00.htm


HP PSC 2355 all-in-one printer The HP PSC 2355 all-in-one provides convenient printing and scanning tools for photo hobbyists.

The HP PSC 2355 all-in-one is an inkjet printer, scanner, and copier well suited for homes where digital photography is popular but not a profession. This device comes with a colour LCD as well as a full set of camera-card readers and a PictBridge port to make printing and basic editing of digital photos easy, with or without a computer. If you're looking for a photocentric inkjet printer that can also scan and copy on the side, the HP 2355 is an average option for a machine in its class.

The attractive blue-and-grey HP PSC 2355 all-in-one shares the streamlined bread-box shape and size of the silvery HP PSC 1610, standing 440 x 363 x 208 mm (WDH). Atop the HP 2355, an itty-bitty pop-up LCD lets you view, edit, and print photos from popular digital media cards. You can even tilt the LCD for easy viewing from your chair. Underneath the LCD, the control panel includes a numeric keypad and buttons organised clearly by function, such as dedicated photo printing, scanning, and copying.

The HP PSC 2355 all-in-one has no automatic document feeder (ADF) to weigh it down, so the scanner lid is slim, light, and easy to lift. The hinges also detach, in case you want to capture the pages of a thick book on the letter-size glass bed. However, the lack of an ADF makes copying multipage documents a laborious affair.

You can easily pull up the top of the 2355 to expose the print cartridges. The 2355 holds just two ink tanks at a time: either colour and black or colour and photo. You'll have to swap the colour and photo cartridges when you switch between printing text and photos, an annoyance common among lower-end all-in-ones.

The HP 2355 has one main tray that does double duty to hold 100 sheets of plain paper input and 50 sheets of printed output pages. HP recommends that you clear the output frequently to avoid paper jams. Because there is no alternative media slot or straight paper-path option, all paper--even glossy photographs--exits the machine slightly curled.

The HP 2355's clearly labelled PictBridge port and media-card readers (for CompactFlash, SmartMedia, Memory Stick, Secure Digital, and xD) are tucked into the far lower-left corner of the printer. The HP 2355's single USB 2.0 port and power connection are in the back, along with a rear door that you can open to clean out paper jams.

The HP PSC 2355 all-in-one provides the usual array of features for a machine in its class, and it makes photo printing easy straight from a camera or a memory card. If you own either an HP digital camera or a PictBridge-supported camera, you can connect it via USB directly to the 2355 to print. If you'd like to use the 2355's control panel instead, just slip the memory card out of the camera and into the front of the printer. The first image will appear on the LCD panel, which offers a menu of suggestions: Photo Menu, Photo Edit, Proof Sheet, and Print Photos.

If you're treating the HP 2355 as a mini-photo kiosk and don't care to control it with your computer, you can use the LCD to remove red-eye, adjust the brightness level of a photo, pick a frame, and choose a colour effect such as sepia, antique, or black and white. If you're using the 2355 with your PC or Mac, you can transfer and save images to your computer's hard drive from the media card inserted into the printer. Using HP's Image Zone and Instant Share software, you can crop, resize, or solarise your pictures, then e-mail them to your friends.

However, if you already own photo software that you're fond of, or if your computer is low on storage space, you should think twice before installing Image Zone and Instant Share, since you must install either both or neither of these memory-hogging programs. This is a shame, because people who need photo-imaging software and want Image Zone will have to live with Instant Share, which nobody with e-mail access really needs. Instant Share gives novice users a step-by-step approach to e-mailing photos, but it's framed within HP's ugly, ad-laden template.

When you install the 2355's drivers from the CD-ROM, you choose between Typical installation, which hogs 771MB of memory and includes Image Zone and Instant Share, or the 339MB Minimum. Either way, you'll get the drivers you need to print and scan.

In addition to photo printing, the HP 2355 scans black-and-white or colour documents, one at a time, at up to 1,200x4,800dpi. You can also make and resize greyscale or colour copies without your computer.

The HP 2355 operated about as quickly as the competition within its price range, though it was markedly slower than the zippy Dell 942 in every category but photo printing. We waited only 1.5 minutes for the HP 2355 to produce an 8x10 glossy photo vs. the whopping 4.75 minutes for the Dell 942 and the 5.47 minutes for the Lexmark P6250. The HP 2355 sped through greyscale scans as well, producing 5.13 pages per minute (ppm) vs. the 2.96ppm of the Brother MFC-420cn.

The HP PSC 2355 all-in-one did a good job in CNET Labs' tests of printed text, which were dark black and easy to read even in italics and minuscule font sizes, despite some visible ink overspray and printhead alignment errors. The colour-graphics document test featured decent colours and smooth gradients but suffered from colour and printhead banding and overall low contrast.

The HP 2355 did a passable job on our test photo, rendering bright colours accurately and displaying good detail, such as the sharp spines on a cactus. Areas of the test document that should have been pure white came out dingy, due to low contrast. Additionally, upon close inspection, we could see a faint area of horizontal, low-resolution banding at the very bottom of the 8x10-inch photo. HP's Web site offers suggestions to remedy this, but none worked for us. If this happens with your HP 2355, you can avoid the glitch by printing photos with a 0.75-inch border around the page.

Scans produced by the HP 2355 in colour and in black and white were mediocre and low contrast. Delicate lines seemed smudged or even partially erased in some areas of the greyscale scan. The colour scan had a washed-out appearance, with muted, dull colours.

CNET Labs' all-in-one speed tests
(Pages per minute; longer bars indicate better performance)
Copy  
Color scan  
Grayscale scan  
Photo  
Text  
Dell 942 all-in-one
3.49 
2.99 
4.15 
0.21 
6.9 
HP PSC 2355 all-in-one
1.01 
2.92 
5.13 
0.43 
2.92 
Lexmark P6250 all-in-one
1.57 
3.08 
4.15 
0.18 
1.15 
Brother MFC-420cn all-in-one
2.27 
3.1 
2.95 
0.15 
3.19 

CNET Labs' all-in-one quality tests
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Color scan  
Grayscale scan  
Photo  
Graphics  
Text  
HP PSC 2355 all-in-one
Fair 
Fair 
Good 
Good 
Good 
Lexmark P6250 all-in-one
Fair 
Fair 
Good 
Good 
Good 
Brother MFC-420cn all-in-one
Fair 
Fair 
Good 
Good 
Good 
Dell 942 all-in-one
Poor 
Poor 
Excellent 
Good 
Poor 

NOTE: Products in this test are for comparative purposes only and are not necessarily available in the Australian market.

Click here to learn more about how CNET Labs tests printers.

HP PSC 2355 all-in-one printer
Company: HP Australia
Price: AU$349
Phone: 13 23 47

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