Canon PIXMA iP8500 Photo Printer

Electronics : Canon PIXMA iP8500 Photo Printer

Canon PIXMA iP8500 Photo Printer

from: Canon Office Products



 : Canon PIXMA iP8500 Photo Printer
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Binding: Electronics
Brand: Canon
EAN: 0013803037951
Label: Canon Office Products
Manufacturer: Canon Office Products
Model: 9325A001
Modem Description: None
Publisher: Canon Office Products
Release Date: 2004-10-15
Studio: Canon Office Products



Editorial Review:

Product DescriptionIncludes: Easy-PhotoPrint (Win/Mac), Easy-WebPrint (Win), PhotoRecord (Win), print head, 8 ink tanks: cyan, magenta, yellow, black, photo cyan, photo magenta, red, & green, power cord, 4' x 6' paper sample pack, & more. Canon PIXMA iP8500 Photo Printer - This printer features an 8-color ChromaPLUS ink system that utilizes 8 separate ink tanks. This gives you life-like detail and stunning color reproduction for your personal photos. It also features 6,144 print nozzles, which lets you print your highly detailed photos and super-fast speeds! The PIXMA iP8500 can print a borderless 4' x 6' photograph in approx. 21 seconds!! Paper Sizes - Letter, Legal, Credit Card (2.13 x 3.39), 4 x 6, 5 x 7, & U.S. #10 Envelopes Connects to a PC or Mac via USB 2.0 (backwards compatible to 1.1) Minimum Requirements Windows XP - Pentium 300MHz/128MB RAM Windows 2000 - Pentium 133MHz/64MB RAM Windows Me - Pentium 150MHz/32MB RAM Windows 98 - Pentium 486MHz/16MB RAM Mac OS X v. 10.2.1 to 10.3.x - PowerPC, G3, G4, G5 / 128MB RAM Mac OS v. 9.x - PowerPC / 20MB RAM Unit Dimensions - 17.8 (w) x 11.5 (d) x 6.7 (h) Unit Weight - 15.4 lbs.




Features:
  • Sharp 4,800 x 2,400 dpi maximum resolution
  • Up to 16 ppm black, 12 ppm color; built-in 2-sided printing
  • Borderless 4-by-6-inch photo in just 23 seconds
  • Directly supports PictBridge-compatible digital cameras and DV camcorders
  • PC and Mac compatible; 1-year warranty with toll-free phone support





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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Wonderful, Amazing
Great printer, prints on photo paper are better than any professional photo developer. Expensive ink, but worth it for the amazing prints. Not grainy under the finest microscope.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Canon PIXMA iP8500 Photo Printer
- Easy to setup both hw/sw
- Great quality photo with Canon Paper Pro



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - PIXMA iP8500 printer
Great quality, easy to set up, and use



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Extremely happy with this product (UPDATED)
So far my experience (over the past three months) has led me to the conclusion that I have bought the best photo printer I could have for the money. I did extensive research, read all the reviews, and settled on this model only after careful consideration.

It all paid off when I installed this beautiful machine on my computer and printed off the first picture. I used the low speed USB connection, although it has been noted that a USB2 also exists. I was unsure if my computer would handle the USB2. Anyhow, I found the printing speed to be excellent even using the normal USB. The software installation proceeded smoothly, the setup of the printer was intuitive, and the output was extremely high quality, exceeding my expectations, on the very first try.

I have been using the printer frequently since I first installed it. I normally use the Canon Photo Paper Pro, and have been consistently delighted by the results. I have not run out of any ink yet, but I must be getting close by now. People who see the photos I have printed remark that they look like processed photographs.

I should point out that I use Photoshop to clean up every photo before I print it, and I try to go with a resolution of at least 600 dpi to achieve photo-quality output. Any higher than that, and the storage size of each photo gets pretty huge. The color balance has been superb; no overweighting of any particular type of ink.

One of my pet peeves of inkjet printers, and I have owned many, is that the nozzles tend to clog over time and the output starts to have horizontal lines in it. I have not noticed that at all with the Pixma. The ink pots do NOT have the print heads in them, as HP and many others do. Instead there is a separate, replaceable print head. I like this, because it keeps down the cost of each ink pot, and allows the user to easily replace the print head when it really needs it. The printer seems to have a cleaning cycle that is very frequent, which must account for the fact that I have never had to initiate a cleaning cycle manually and why I can walk over to my computer and print a photo without having to worry about whether or not I will be wasting high-end photo paper on mediocre output.

There are 8 separate ink pots. I like this because you only need to replace them as they run out, rather than replace a single, expensive, multi-color cartridge that costs an arm and a leg.

This is also a very nice looking printer, unlike most I have seen. The design is sleek enough that you would not mind having it prominently visible in your office. It is fairly quiet in operation, and I have had no problems of paper misfeeds or jams whatsoever.

One comment, which probably goes without saying, but if you're not a print expert you may not realize it: You would not want to use this as your only printer. Keep your cheapie for normal text and the like, and reserve this for photographs only. You will waste precious high-quality ink and wear out the print head needlessly if you try to make this your sole printer.

If you are interested in outstanding quality photo prints for a very reasonable price, I highly recommend you take a look at this printer. I cannot find anything to complain about yet!

UPDATE 4/21/06: I have now been using this printer regularly for about 6 months. I am extremely impressed by the quality and reliability of the unit over that time period. It has never dried out like all my other inkjet printers, never had to be manually re-primed, and never had to be rebooted. I continue to rate this item FIVE STARS especially for the money.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Amazing quality printer
Very impressive 4x6 color photo prints!!! They look even better than prints I get from standard film developers (couldn't find any pixels off with magnification). It will be interesting to see how efficient it is on the use of 8 different ink tanks. The cost for the 8 pack of new ink isn't cheap, currently coming in at $75.

Data I have seen from test labs show the total cost per 4x6 color photo print at .57 cents and that includes the paper (www.pcworld.com/reviews/article/0,aid,119573,pg,6,00.asp) For basic every day printing you don't care about the quality on, it might make sense to keep another cheap printer around, but for home printing of photos you want to have a terrific memory of this printer does the job and so much more!!!



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Every now and then, I feel thankful that I'm not an idiot. Don't get me wrong, most of the time I yearn for the simple, carefree life of the halfwit. I long to relish the stupid joys of the lowest common denominator, uncomplicated by critical thinking, ulterior motives, ironic distance or simple logic. To drive my daughter straight to Disneyland and delight in the asinine, saccharine femininity represented by their Princess Fantasy Faire. To take in an adorable baby chimp without thinking through the very real possibility that it might grow up and rip someone's face off one day. To say "It's all good" and really mean it.

Being stupid is fun and relaxing. That much is obvious, and it enrages the non-stupid to no end. Just look at the Letters pages here on Salon: Filled with intelligent, tormented human beings, angry at everything under the sun, absolutely furious – livid! -- over the existence of television sets and octuplet moms on disability and fat kids and Sarah Palin and anyone insensitive to the plights of polar bears, severe allergy sufferers, the home-schooled, and, of course, intelligent, tormented, lactose-intolerant human beings like themselves.

But being an imbecile has its drawbacks. Yesterday, for example, I got an email from the IRS. Apparently the IRS needs more information from me -- including my social security number, which they seem to have misplaced. That's understandable, really. The IRS is huge, their office is probably a wreck. Anyway, I have just 12 hours to fill out my tax refund claim form, but my correspondence must remain confidential and "must not be disclosed by anyone other than the intended recipient." I think that means don't tell your accountant about this, because she might not realize that the IRS handles much of its business through email, and sometimes refers to taxpaying citizens as, simply, 'Rabbit.'"

The truth is, I wouldn't have to be that much stupider than I am now to fill out that form and send it back. Instead, I just feel really glad that I'm not a complete moron.

...

via Salon

Last week, I put the 2009 Continuous Integration poll online. However, at one point, I started to notice some major irregularities in the voting patterns - in short, some unscrupulous voters where apparently attempting to skew the results in their...







Canon PIXMA iP8500 Photo Printer

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