Electronics conglomerate Brother International is recalling about 100,000 business printers after reports that some have overheated and caught fire.
PC maker Dell Computer is taking on Hewlett-Packard and others with a quartet of inkjet and laser devices, which it will begin shipping in the U.S. in April, but Australian users may be left behind.
The untimely demise of SCO Linux threw out our plans at the last minute. More importantly, though, will it affect your plans?
Anti-graft officers are investigating whether Customs officers are linked to a syndicate that allegedly pocketed up to US$2 million (HK$15.58 million) through a fake computer parts scam.
To escape from its documentation nightmare, Dow Corning called on an ASP specialising in procurement applications for enterprisewide printing and graphic communications materials.
Who needs colour? Sometimes all you need is a black-and-white printer that can churn out the pages fast. We look at your options.
Recently, HP released its largest ever range of printers at its Go Print 2.0 Conference in Shanghai. ZDNet.com.au's photo gallery gives you the complete range, along with comparisons, prices and release dates.
Sun's co-founder has reveled in running his mouth, and the list of 'McNealy-isms' has become legendary within the tech industry.
Like it or not, network administrators these days must take on the added task of playing Big Brother, monitoring employees' use of the computers and network. Here are 10 of the most effective ways to keep an eye on what your users are doing.
If a car starts to stall, drivers would pop the bonnet and check the individual components. But when a network goes down, how are the weak points identified and isolated?
Who needs colour? Sometimes all you need is a black-and-white printer that can churn out the pages fast. We test your options.
They can print, copy, scan, and fax but can they open tins? We put multifunction devices to the test and find out.
We've tested plenty of printers at CNET, but very few have frustrated us as much as the Brother DCP-165C multifunction has. The counter-intuitive set-up, bland design, deplorable print quality and crawling output speeds earn this printer a double thumbs down.
The Brother MFC-990CW is a speedy, fully capable all-in-one device that earns our recommendation for an individual or a family that will make use of its touchscreen and telephone/answering machine.
The Brother MFC-7440N prints quickly and is fairly inexpensive to sustain, but we simply can't get behind a printer with poor quality graphics, significant hardware defects, and a boring design.
Ben Forta: All about Adobe
Take one ColdFusion veteran and mix in a healthy dose of prolific book writing, and chances are you will end u… Watch it now
Google CEO Eric Schmidt
Google's chief sits down for an extremely rare, wide-ranging interview and discusses Google's two operating sy… Watch it now
Telstra shareholders fear break up
What do Telstra shareholders think of the telco's new CEO David Thodey? And would they support the government'… Watch it now
Can not-so-smart meters help the NBN?
Can the Telco Reform Act be win-win?
Has New Zealand's smiling assassin delivered?
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