News (11)

  • Printers get a glimpse of OLED tech

    Seiko Epson is bringing emerging OLED technology to one of the more staid pieces of office equipment, the printer.

  • Samsung aims printers at the enterprise, kills OEM

    Samsung launched its first range of business printers on Friday and said it will phase out its OEM deals in the long term.

  • Toshiba, NEC see blue in DVD future

    Toshiba and NEC are demonstrating a new DVD recording technology that promises a significantly higher storage capacity without a major investment in new production facilities.

  • Samsung announces 'largest ever' organic LED display

    Samsung SDI, the Korean giant's display division, has announced prototypes of a 17" active matrix organic light emitting diode (OLED) display. Due for launch next year, the display has a resolution of 1600x1200 pixels and a brightness of 400 lumens, and is the largest OLED matrix display to date according to the company.

  • Numonyx brings phase change memory to market

    Numonyx, the memory joint venture between STMicroelectronics and Intel is now shipping samples of phase change memory (PCM) chips durable, high density memory and will start shipping PCM chips commercially later this year, CEO Brian Harrison said at a press conference on Monday.

Features and Case Studies (3)

  • Philips picks blue lasers for itty-bitty disc

    Consumer-electronics giant Philips is demonstrating a prototype miniature disc drive that uses a coin-size disc capable of storing nearly twice as much data as a standard-sized CD.

  • Blu-ray burns for interactive content

    The next generation in DVD technology will let consumers carry the equivalent of a hard drive on a disc, but what are they supposed to do with all that capacity? Interact, supporters say.

  • Is Dell's winning streak in jeopardy?

    CEO Kevin Rollins' long run of good fortune faces the biggest test yet. Still, he says, "I wouldn't go run (HP)."

Reviews (31)

  • Samsung CLP-310

    You don't get blazingly fast laser speeds with the CLP-310, but it does live up to the hype of offering affordable colour laser printing in a small form factor.

  • Samsung CLP-315W

    The Samsung CLP-315W is a fancy looking wireless laser printer with a clean design and small footprint, but the output quality is unacceptable and the blisteringly slow speeds will have you searching for other options.

  • Samsung ML-2851ND

    Samsung's ML-2851ND is a bare bones mono-laser printer with a few extra features attached that will appeal to the small-to-medium business crowd that simply needs to print out text documents or light graphics. The AU$330 price tag is higher than average for a monochrome printer. Still, if print speed and print quality are deciding factors for you, consider the Samsung ML-2851ND.

  • Samsung ML-2571N

    The Samsung ML-2571N mono laser printer has the right combination of price and features for a home office user with basic printing needs.

  • Samsung ML-1630

    If you want a monochrome laser that doesn't look like yet another grey box of doom, the ML-1630 could be your perfect match.

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