Something to lighten the mood

Nothing smart about it at all.

1709242689649.png
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 users
ANY printer. They all jam when you are in a hurry for a document.
My most recent fun with technology was a ‘fuser error’ message on an otherwise quite adequate budget Samsung colour laser printer. While those of us who eschew inkjets have long come to accept the “Gillette” model of the first set of high capacity toner cartridges costing more than the printer, the fuser was a big surprise.
Thankfully my Xerox 6027 is still motoring along.
Never had a paper jam in any of my home printers.

Who here fondly remembers graduating from a 9 pin dot matrix to 24 pin, then to laser?
 
  • Like
Reactions: 2 users
The worst were the Epsom ink jets - that not only ran out of ink very quickly, but when they did their bot redirected you to their page to BUY CARTRIDGES, and held the computer hostage until you either clicked “Buy Now” or removed the drivers. I wasn’t about to give them my credit card number after that stunt - so Remove Printer it was. It then sat in the corner of my office, and eventually became Somebody Else’s Problem.
 
Unbelievable. This thread about Epsom is both funny and maddening:
https://www.techdirt.com/2003/07/08/consumer-association-says-avoid-epson-ink-cartridges/


But here is the most disturbing post in the entire thread:

How does Epson know I am not using their ink or cartridges​

Funny thing happened to me today, I re-filled my SX445 cartridges, not Epson but ones that are sold with a resettable chip so you can fill them with your own ink as many times as you like. I had a small problem getting the printer to work saying it didn’t recognise the cartridges so reset the chips and turned power off printer etc, finally got it to work.
Anyway, the purpose of my note here is that within a couple of hours I have received an e-mail of Epson asking me if I am using the correct, ie Epson Ink. This make me think the printer software must be informing Epson perhaps that I have just changed the cartridge and there was an error. Has anybody else noticed this?
 
Who here fondly remembers graduating from a 9 pin dot matrix to 24 pin, then to laser?
I had the 9 pin dot matrix Apple Imagewriter II which could print in color using a 4 color ribbon. Not bad for the '80's.
At work we had the first Apple Laserwriter, 300 dpi, postscript, 8 ppm, with AppleTalk/LocalTalk networks. Something like $7000 USD in '85.
 

Attachments

  • Imagewrtiter II color ribbon.png
    Imagewrtiter II color ribbon.png
    225.4 KB · Views: 24
  • Like
Reactions: 1 user
diyAudio Moderator
Joined 2008
Paid Member
I have received an e-mail of Epson
Deplorable. Makes me think about why I don't have to smuggle drinks into the cinema any more.

I used to have a Deskjet500 I liked more than others. Fixed it more times than it was meant to be, I figure.

Daisy Wheel printer (remember those?)
They were the next thing after golf balls, that I noticed ;)
 
Tänud!

I worked for half a year in Eesti and tried to pick up some words and phrases and say 'hello', 'thanks', 'good morning' and even count to kümme. A collegue who had been working at the same plant for several years hadn't learnt a single Estonian word.
I am hinting the close relationship between Finnish and Estonian languages.

WRONG! The collegue gotten the word kilekott (bag). He had to ask for a plastic bag in the shops as they were hidden so he couldn't point at them. One word ... BAG!!!!:unsure:
 
Anyway, the purpose of my note here is that within a couple of hours I have received an e-mail of Epson asking me if I am using the correct, ie Epson Ink. This make me think the printer software must be informing Epson perhaps that I have just changed the cartridge and there was an error. Has anybody else noticed this?

This kind of stuff is beyond deplorable. It's just rude.

But the New Breed seems to think that any and all invasions of privacy are OK. I made the mistake of web surfing on my cell phone, which I primarily use to stream music. Google (ugh) shared my cell phone email with hundreds of spammers, just from looking up a few things. Previous to this my cell phone was pristine; zero spam. Now I get over 100 spam emails a day. I have to spend a few minutes a day deleting the spam.

How do these eggheads justify in their shrunken heads that this is OK? And who actually look at that filthy spam and thinks "I'm going to give these pirates my money?"

But salesmen today have a similar mindset. When I get cornered by a salesman now, they won't stop yammering at me no matter how many times I say NO NO NO NO NO NO. Does this tactic actually work? Who taught these young, rude people that this is OK?
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 users