Can there be life without a printer? (Part 2)
Tuesday, 7 April 2009
Last week I wrote about some different ways that you can get around having a photo printer in your home. Indeed, the ubiquitous photo inkjet printer tends to introduce frustration in a life that has no pressing need of more. In this article, I address the photo printer’s more formal companions: laser printers and their inkjet brethren.
Printing Documents
In a perfect paperless world we would never have need for dead trees. But that isn’t about to happen—there will always be a need to reprint certain important documents, and occasionally one may wish to print something for use away from a computer (e.g. a recipe).
Unless you want to print photo-quality Helvetica and Times Roman, you now are looking at using a traditional document printer, such as a laser printer or an inkjet printer. These days you may well have an all-in-one printer that combines a scanner with printer and fax.
The main problem I have with any of these printers is cost. Good laser printers are expensive and the cheap ones are just loss leaders to get you to spend $$$ on the toner cartridges. Worse still, those giveaway printers that come with new computers are the epitome of loss leaders—they make their profit on ink. Some have posited that the ink cartridge manufacturers have programmed their products to expire before the ink is exhausted.
Printing Online
For those who only have occasional print jobs, why not print your documents online?
For this article, I looked at two services: Staples Copy & Print and Fedex Office (the Copy Center Formerly Known as Kinkos). I selected these because they have a very large brick-and-mortar presence. Though you can have your documents mailed to you, you really want to go there and get them right now, don’t you?
As always, do a quick Google search to see the current lay of the landscape.
Staples
I started by going to the Staples Copy & Print web site.
Then I clicked on Create Copy Project. There was no need to log in at this point.
I was prompted to choose a local store; I entered my zip and clicked on a store.
After this, I provided a job name and quantity and started adding documents:

After a minute or so I had uploaded both my document on Creating a Basic NAS with Ubuntu Linux and my Secret Missile Plans (sorry, no link for that one!).
Staples supports printing several dozen different document types. Even though my missile plans appear to have a PDF icon below, you can rest assured that I uploaded a Microsoft Office .docx document.
The next step guided me through choosing options for each of my documents. There are plenty to choose from such as single-side/duplex, paper type, layout, folding, stapling, and so forth.
I chose some nice pink paper and set it to duplex.
Beware: The Color option was selected by default. I imagine this feature has earned them substantial $$$ from people who were just printing black and white documents. Sneaky.

Once my settings were all chosen, I was given an opportunity to review the print job before adding it to my shopping cart.

At this point I decided to spare a tree and I emptied my shopping cart.
Fedex Kinkos
The experience with Fedex Office was similar.
I started by going to the Fedex Office Print Online website.
Like Staples, I went through the process of uploading my documents and choosing options.
Beware: Again, the Color option was chosen by default. Make sure you choose B&W if you are printing black and white.
Here is the preview of my Linux document:

How was the Price?
With my basic settings, printing 38 total pages in full duplex, Staples was fairly cheap, coming in at just under $3.00, while Fedex came in about a dollar more.
These prices reflect a per-page cost of between 8 and 12 cents. This is not bad at all, considering I don’t need my own printer!
Note that the different features you choose are à la carte, adding little bits to the cost. If you think the price seems a little high, go and fiddle around with the options you selected.
Beware of that color copy trap. Shame on both Fedex and Staples for making color the default! I suspect that they may have consulted some of those ink cartridge guys for their business model.
The Fedex site openly references a Volume Discount, and it is likely that Staples would have something similar.
One More Option: Sneakernet!
One final technique that I have not mentioned until now is good old-fashioned Sneakernet. You can always put your documents on a thumb drive and stop by your favorite office center and ask them to print them. You will pay similar fees to their per-copy charges. Not bad, especially if you want them to use high quality paper and a top-notch laser printer.
And don’t forget that Sneakernet works as well for photos. Many chain pharmacies and supermarkets have a carry-in photo printing service. Just bring in a thumb drive or a SD card with your photos on it and they can print them for you. It won’t be as cheap as Winkflash, but it’s still a better deal than the old days.
Use common sense here. If you are handing over an SD card that has the only copy of your photos on it, you should probably use your thumbnail to flick the little “read-only” lever on the card.
Summary
In these two articles I have provided several options for handling photo printing and document printing, online or in the store, without ever having to curse at another printer again. I hope that you are able to find something useful here. If you have any advice or feedback on different print services, let me know!



No. 1 — April 7th, 2009 at 11:43 pm
[...] Can there be life without a printer? (Part 2) | Paper Jammed [...]
No. 2 — April 8th, 2009 at 12:22 pm
[...] Can there be life without a printer? (Part 2) | Paper Jammed [...]
No. 3 — May 19th, 2009 at 7:41 am
[...] me, Part 2 is the most interesting one. If you only print occasionally, the author makes the case that you can [...]