IT-Services

CeBIT 2008: Affordable Color Laser Printer from Xerox.

Xerox"s color laser printers are finally becoming affordable. At this year"s CeBIT, the self-proclaimed document company is introducing a 12-page-per-minute office color-laser printer for under $450 (€300). Xerox Phaser 6125 (Compare Prices on Xerox Phaser 6125) The name of this model from well-known company Xerox is Phaser 6125. The manufacturer claims it can print 12 pages per minute in color or 16 in black and white at a resolution of 600 dpi. It is aimed at small to medium-sized offices as well as home users. In offices, it can be connected to networks while stand-alone workstations will use the USB port. The paper tray holds 250 sheets According to Xerox, the toner cartridges of the Phaser 6125 can be recycled. The Phaser 6125 is equipped with 64 MB of memory which can"t be expanded or upgraded. Drivers for Fedora Core 1, Red Hat 9 and Windows are included. Xerox quotes a power consumption of 280 Watts in use, 50 Watts in standby and 5 watts in power save mode. The printer is warmed up and ready to print after 30 seconds. Xerox at CeBIT 2008: Hall 7/stand A16 Read more CeBIT stories.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Electronic Frontier Foundation decodes printer tracking dots.
The next time you use the office printer, you may be printing up a lot more than sales figures or quarterly reports. Many color laser printers are secretly embedding tracking dots, minute and almost invisible yellow specks, on documents. While many have speculated on the meaning of the dots, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) appears to have decrypted the code.
Popular Articles

Shuttle to offer free CPU coolers with its BTX XPCs.
To promote the first production run of its PCIe-enabled pico-BTX XPC model SB86i, Shuttle Computer will bundle a free BTX CPU cooler with each barebones system, according to sources. Although the sources claimed the 5000 units will begin shipping next week, the company refuted the claim and stated that the systems will not begin shipping until mid-December, although they will be available in retail outlets before Christmas.

Acorp to withdraw from motherboard market.
Second-tier motherboard makers Acorp Electronics will withdraw from the motherboard market and instead migrate into the production of networking devices such as ADSL2+ modems, the company said after a provisional shareholders meeting on Thursday, March 10.