Iphone 4 Quick Review

When it comes to Apple gadgets usually i will go to The Spring shopping mall Apple Store to test because they have the test unit for people to touch and play with. So i have tested the new Iphone 4 which is very good. Operating System stability is perfect and no lag when scrolling from one screen to another, its just slide smoothly. As always Apple will never failed with its sleek design and of course the new Iphone 4 is no exception. The pre-install application software also are as good as of those from the Android OS smart phones. But...!!


The only major disadvantage of all Apple products is the flexibility to install other application software that is not specifically designed for Apple. Unlike Android OS, 90% of application software are offered free for users especially those made by Google and also made from various sources. The Iphone on the other hand 70% are paid applications and most annoying is FREE stuffs are just Trials products. Thats why i always stay away from Apple gadgets despite of its unique technological innovation. Personally i feel that Apple is as ignorance as myself.

Anyway apart from that i have also made an inquiry from the DIGI store for the Iphone 4. They said only RM58/- monthly fees for 2 years post-paid data plan for unlimited internet connection with the same speed as the HTC Desire HD which cost RM68/- per month. So i guess the Iphone has the better deal from DIGI compare to HTC but too bad i still chose the later.
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RESET Canon IP 4680






FIRST STEPS:  Entering Service Mode
You have to enter in service mode in order to used the resetter. To do that follow this procedure,

1. Turn off the printer without pulling the power cords.
2. Hold down Resume button and press Power button.
3. Keep holding down Power button and let Resume button go.
4. Then Press Resume button twice then let BOTH buttons go.
5. You will notice that the Alternate Blinking error is gone, this means that the printer is in Service Mode state.

SECOND STEPS: Using the Resetter

1. After you download the resetter,  double click "IP4860.exe"
2. Press the "Main" Button, Then press "EEPROM Clear" button if a pop-up appear just click OK
5. Then power off the printer(sometimes you have to press twice the power button to turn off) and turn on again. and its done!

Download Resetter at Canon Resetter Page
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More on Lexmarks Wireless X6570 All in One

I wrote my November 2007 column, from a mostly users perspective (see "Observations: Wi-Fi Printing -- Look Ma, No Cables"), exploring the emerging "standard" wireless interface on many of todays new printers. I used a Lexmark (NYSE LXK) Wireless X6570 All-in-One as my subject device, and found its printing capabilities to be more than satisfactory.

Since finishing the column, Ive continued to use the Lexmark AIO, and recently found a post "Berlinds Testbed" blog from ZDNets David Berlind on his experiences with the same all-in-one (see "HP, eat your heart out. At $150, Lexmark’s WiFi All-in-1 printer/copier/scanner/fax got my cash".) Davids post contains an interesting account of his purchase of the Lexmark product, including receiving surprisingly knowledgeable help from his local Staples store. And like me, he found the Wi-Fis biggest benefit to be location flexibility. (The basement-based Linux print server he replaced also rang true!)

Although I wasnt out to perform a full-scale review on the X6570, I still avoided reading other reviews before my own hands-on experiences with the products, in order to maintain my objectivity. After the fact though, its good to see someone elses similar experiences. This includes my post-column work with some of the products other functions, including successfully copying and scanning using the all-in-ones OCR capabilities. I recommend the Berlind post from earlier this month, including the up-to-now 24 comments, which (not surprisingly) run the gamut of pros and cons on everything from Wi-Fi itself to ink usage and color print quality.
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Lyra Symposium first sessions include keynotes from Ricohs Potesky and Xeroxs Appelo Lyras LeCompte and Priede size up the industry

The first sessions (before the morning break) are history and heres a brief synopsis:

Following Frank Stefanssons opening welcome, Keynote #1 was a strong effort, by Senior VP Corporate Communications, Product/Solutions and Channel Marketing, Ron Potesky.

His theme? Change can be good (renamed from “change is good”).

And a great point -- just what does a guy from Ricoh know about change? Plenty! Potesky’s outlined a brief history of Ricoh’s activities including acquisitions of Savin, Gestetner, Lanier, Hitachi, IBM (Infoprint, actually currently still a Joint Venture but leading to a full-fledged acquistion), and ending (for now?) with IKON in 2008. He likened the IKON acquisition to Xerox’s 2007 acquisition of Global Imaging, a large non-prorietary base of customers.

Potesky covered trends in channels (Ricoh/IKON, Xerox/Global, Konica-Minolta/Danka, Canon Grows CBS, Independent Dealer Valuation Bubble, Dealers selling at 10X earnings, Direct vs. Dealer), technology battles (Copier-based A3 vs. printer-based A4, Ink vs. laser, Print vs. display), and the business model shift (Lease and Purchase vs. Managed Print Services/Facilities Management, Break/Fix “Copier” Service vs. Cartridge Based end-user service.)

One Conclusion: Supply outweighing demand, significant consolidation. A question though -- are we in the industry DRIVING OUR OWN DEMISE?
Were offering to solve many customer problems, like lower Total Cost of Ownership (TCO), a focus on the environment, printing less, controlling color, all with the underlying theme of "Spend your money with us, not them…"

Potesky offered examples of brands that have adapted and those that haven’t. Andthen a good personal story of a bad example: Linotype-Hell – a market leader that didn’t pay attention to signs of change (ignoring emerging threats like desktop Postscript printers and Direct-to-Plate) in their business environment. (Hell in this case is not a place but rather an acquired company that helped take Linotype there.)

His final thoughts were:

*EMBRACE CHANGE
*SEIZE OPPORTUNITIES
*THINK BIG

And If You Take One Thing Away…
“It is not the strongest of the species that survive, nor the most intelligent, but the one most responsive to change.” - Author unknown


And unlike the later presentations, there was time for a couple of questions.

Q – What makes a good acquisition? A – didn’t integrate fast enough (Savin/Gestener took seven years, Lanier also; faster integration is easier. Going much better with IKON!)

Q – A3 and A4, does Ricoh see A4 MFPs taking away A3 placements? A – Absolutely! Esp in mid- and low-end markets (sements I and ii especially). Will continue, but service model for A3 is still a good economic model, with individual parts replacements. With ink technology improved to mean less “throw away” that could change.

__________


Ann Priede, VP of Publications, and Charley LeCompte, president and founder of Lyra, publisher of The Hard Copy Observer and The Hard Copy Supplies Journal, then presented the first of two “Making the Grades” – Marketing and financials – based on the printer/copier portions of the business, with todays (Tuesday) based on the copier side of things. Priede offered developments and grades in sales and marketing, products, and technology, and LeCompte countered with financial metrics and grades based on revenue growth and operating profit. Companies covered included Canon, Konica Minolta, Kyocera, Ricoh, OcĂ©, Sharp, Toshiba, and Xerox. A relatively short presentation, it was packed with data and very interesting grading outcomes! Tomorrows promises to be interesting when the eight top printer vendors are examined.

__________


Opportunity in Adversity: Finding The Way Forward, Willem Appelo, President Global Business and Services Group, Xerox Corporation

Look ma – No slides! The first presentation to go without the usual visual aids, but a carefully prepared pitch nonetheless.

Appelo started with the popular theme of how the economy has affected our industry, and in an optimistic view sees the benefit of the current woes as representing a catalyst to change for the better for the world economy. There’s “no business as usual” anymore and the Xerox exec drew on the company’s own near-death financial crisis of the early decade, eight years ago. He offered examples of how Xerox was forced to change and how those changes ultimately bolstered the company, in ways that are very observable today in the company’s strength (remember it’s relative, given their “C” grade for operating profits, as covered in LeCompte’s prior presentation.)
Appelo pointed to the historical customer focus among the founding leadership of industry stalwarts Ricoh and HP, along with Xerox.

Ownership of document output is typically spread across the organization – Xerox has an assessment that helps customers design a more efficient and less wasteful copying and printing, based on customer needs. Bottom line -- adapt to the customer! Trends include single function to multi-function machines, a “window to the world”. Another example is EIP, Xerox’s open platform for development, which makes it easy for partners to develop tailored solutions for Xerox machines. Lean Six Sigma is the tool Appelo credits for helping transform Xerox.

In the area of “green” Appelo described one example -- Xerox’s efforts to create a
more environmentally sensitive paper. With usage of seven hundred pounds of paper a year, per person, worldwide, and growing at least in some geographies, the making and usage of paper is an opportunity. Xerox developing a “digital paper” that would be more environmentally friendly, by using mechnanical rather than chemical means, using more of the tree and less water in the process.

Partnerships were a recurring theme in the speeceh. Outsourcing of cartridge manufacturing of cartridges to Flextronics, evolving from a simple outsourcing deal to a deep partnership today. The company’s work with UPS and creative applications was mentioned, and also their partnership in document management with IBM was touted. Sourcing around the globe is key – keeping things the same is not an option.
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Lyra Symposium 2009 Ready to go!

Or more accurately, let the games (yesterdays tennis and golf) end (yes, we can still have a LITTLE fun), and on with the show!
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Day trip to the Sarawak Museum

Woke up on Sunday morning, i feel my mind was feeling foggy and dull all day. So i went to the Sarawak Museum near by to the Merdeka Palace hotel with my wife to refresh myself. I feel better after looking at those things in the museum especially the fish in the aquariums.


Other interesting stuff you can find in the museum is the human skull from the legacy of head hunting tradition practice by the Dayak people in the past.
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Xerox WorkCentre 4150 Jams or Clear the Jam in the Print Engine

If your Xerox WC 4150 is displaying "Clear the Jam in the Print Engine" or constantly jams as paper exits the machine you should check and possibly replace the fuser actuator (part# 120N00534)

Xerox WorkCentre 4150 Fuser Actuator:  Part# - 120N00534.    

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November Observations Interview with Ian Schenkel of EuroSmartz

Observations: Interview with Ian Schenkel of EuroSmartz

Completing the fourth year of my monthly “Observations” column for the Observer, I find myself reflecting back on the exciting variety of subjects I have had the chance to cover. Originally, my beat included two rather broad but related areas of the printer industry—simply stated, its past and its future. The former category often includes a healthy dose of nostalgia regarding how things have changed since foregone days when we were all young but also a reminder of how things may have stayed the same. The latter category is where I point to areas I have observed that are new and emerging.

However, a third category has developed, tied to the future, which is interviewing and reporting on some of the people involved with future-looking products and technologies. These entrepreneurs have typically been contributing to the future of our industry, and this month, I had the pleasure of chatting with Ian Schenkel, co-founder of EuroSmartz Ltd., the company known for being “#1 for Printing Apps on the iPhone and iPod Touch.”

Ian, along with brother Martin, form the basis of a bi-continental team, spanning England and New Zealand, a time-zone combination that the company sees as a big advantage with respect to making good on fast-turnaround 24 × 7 product support. For cohesiveness, I have consolidated a series of international phone calls and e-mails with Ian Schenkel into one interview .

Lyons: What is your professional background?

Schenkel: EuroSmartz was formed in 1994 when we launched a sales force automation application for Mac and Windows. Over the years, it has taken a few different iterations and has now turned into mainly an iPhone-app developing company specializing in printing apps. I am based in Amersham, which is 25 miles northwest of London, and my background has pretty much all been software sales and marketing—I have also helped establish a number of U.S. software companies in Europe.

My brother Martin is based in Auckland, New Zealand and has been a developer for more years than I can remember. His background is in C, C++, Java, and many other different languages. Part of the reason we started EuroSmartz in the first place was because of our complementary skill sets, which has really paid off well for us in the app store.

You need to create great, innovative apps to sell in volume [Martin’s job], but now with 100,000 apps, you also need to make some noise to stand out [my job].

Lyons: What led you to iPhone apps and especially to those that feature printing?

Schenkel: The decision to make iPhone apps was actually pretty easy, I read a few pieces about developers that were making apps for the iPhone and how the SDK [software development kit] was pretty easy to use. I then spoke to my brother, and he downloaded the SDK, and we started making apps.

As for the specifics of printing, that came about from looking for gaps in the apps that were available and also because of our own use of the iPhone—we found there was no solution at the time to print anything, so we thought we would design and build something ourselves. It was a bit of a learning curve getting into passing information and documents to the myriad print drivers on both Mac and PC, but once that was broken down and built, the rest followed pretty easily. Most enhancements we add to our apps are customer-driven requests. Field testing is always the best way to build better products, and we now have an absolutely huge number of customers that give us great feedback.

Lyons: Without saying exactly what is “huge,” can you provide some scale on the success of your apps?

Schenkel: The "number-one" claim we make on our Web site is due to the fact we are the top selling paid printing app in the entire app store and have been for all of 2009. We have two printing apps in the top 100 of productivity, and no other printing app in the store will print the range of document formats that our apps support. Because of this position we have sold more in terms of volume across our family of apps than any other printing app vendor.

Lyons: Will you tell us about being included in one of Apple’s famous “There’s an app for that” television commercials?

Schenkel: The ad was a little out of the blue really, Apple were looking for business apps that enabled them to showcase how the iPhone is a useful business tool. Print n Share was shortlisted and eventually made its place in the Office ad. There is not a huge amount more I can say about the ad, it was all very exciting but also very easy. The biggest thing we had to prepare for was translating the app into other languages. The ad showed in the U.S., UK, Japan, and France. Seeing the app for the first time in Japanese was fun, we knew each of the buttons but could not read what they had on them. We also helped Apple with the sequence of our app in the ad, so that it all flowed correctly.

Lyons: What’s next for EuroSmartz?

Schenkel: We have a number of new apps in the pipeline, some are variations on printing, and some are a complete departure. However the biggest initiative we have in place right now is integrating with other apps to enable them to print. We have created a simple way that other app developers can use our app to print. We provide all the tools for them to build this, and best of all it is free for the developer. Once the apps are integrated, all the customer needs to do is have our app along with the other app on their iPhone, and they can print from that app. We feel this is going to bring some major new features to the iPhone. So far we have two apps integrated and quite a number more in the pipeline.

We are adding four new apps that have integrated with our printing apps in the next few weeks, so we are excited about launching those too.
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Commercial and Production Printing Drupa TransPromo and the new Xerox look

Live from the 2008 Lyra Imaging Symposium in Rancho Mirage CA

Day Twos opening session covered commercial and production printing and included the following presos: “Re-Defining the Production Printing Solutions Value Proposition—Versatility, Reliability and Cost-Effectiveness” by Tom Wetjen, Vice President, Worldwide Graphic Communications Industry, Xerox Corporation; “Customizing the Customer Relationship: Online On-Demand Digital Printing Innovations”, presented by Scott Baker, Vice President Worldwide Business Development, GMC Software AG; “High-Speed, High-Volume: The Fast and the Furious in Production Printing” by Steve Reynolds, Senior Analyst, Lyra Research; and “The Future of Wide Format and Super Wide”, from Tom Baratz, Industry Consultant, Lyra Research.

Take-aways? Along with leap year, the Summer Olympics, and the US Presidential election, this is a Drupa year, and the massive trade show in Dusseldorf Germany drives this segment of the business like nothing else. Well, except for maybe new trends (and/or buzz-words), like this years favorite, TransPromotional. And that new Xerox (NYSE XRX) logo? Im starting to get used to it!
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Observations 2008 The Year of Printing Dangerously

2008 -- The Year of Printing Dangerously

Somehow, going back over the year 2008 feels mentally harrowing. Although there are reasons to celebrate, the year was also characterized by nerve-wracking crises that we cannot say are fully past. It was a momentous and historic year for the world, to be sure, but in many ways it was a quieter and more down-to-business year for the printer industry. So in reflecting on a topic for my end-of-year column, no great industry event triggered my imagination. And in fact, the title of this column was the closest thing to a breakthrough I was able to produce for some time, until the rest of the pieces began falling together to support the thesis of the danger in printing in 2008. Why was printing more “dangerous”, at least in some small ways, in 2008? I think there are numerous reasons to be examined as early indicators at least of major changes in the printing and imaging business.

Printing’s association with troubled industries and the accompanying guilt by association is one reason. During this year’s Lyra Supplies Symposium in Las Vegas in August, the expert panel that concluded the event was asked to comment on the future growth, or lack thereof, that they anticipated in the printer supplies business.

While many panelists conceded that printing had recently declined in certain markets, there were counteracting forces leading to an overall GDP-level growth in printing over the forecast period of the next few years. What was the biggest recent source of decline in printing volumes? Banking and finance-related businesses, including real estate, which have traditionally been print-heavy industries. A lull in their business levels showed up in a correlation with pages printed—and this was in August! With the economic chaos since then, it is only natural to assume that when the dust settles, print demand generated from loans, credit applications, title work, real estate bids and assessments will have fallen drastically, because the number of deals is off sharply and so many pages are printed per deal.

The growing “green” consciousness around printing, especially as it ties to cost savings is another reason. The field of managed print services (MPS) has unquestionably been a bright spot for the industry this year. And its success, in finally seeming to take hold after years of discussion, has many pointing to the green trend among end-users (as well as organizations) as the potential reason for this tipping point.

A recent example, not appearing on the Web pages and success stories of corporate MPS providers like HP or Xerox but at the “TechSoup” Web site, is titled “Choosing Print Management Software.” TechSoup bills itself as the “The Technology Place for Nonprofits,” and while its interest in saving money for its readers is not surprising, the site seems to have focused on printing for both cost and environmental reasons. TechSoup ran a special series including features like “Choosing Print Management Software” and “Creating and Distributing Electronic Annual Reports and Marketing Materials” that was presented with a high level of professionalism, although the topics lead customers in the wrong direction for the printer industry.

One further example of how printing became dangerous, or at least on the outs, comes from a Wall Street Journal article from August 22, titled, “Tech Firms Pitch Tools For Sifting Legal Records: With E-Discovery, Lawyers Face Loss Of Client Fees.” The article reports that millions in legal fees are at stake, as hyper-efficient electronic searching supplants traditional manual searching of paper records, which is time-consuming but provides lots of billable hours. While in many cases (sorry for that one) the process involves merely scanning and indexing historic paper documents, there is also much to be gained from those documents never being in paper form to begin with, and then not, at least as a rule, being re-printed from their electronic repositories for legal purposes.

HP and Xerox are two of the “tech firms” mentioned in the article, and you need look no further than the pages of the May 2008 issue of this newsletter to find a story about HP’s acquisition of Tower Software, an Australian based e-discovery firm.

An alarming October 9 article in The Economist brought further squirming from those of us in the industry. Entitled “The Paperless Office, On its Way, at Last: No longer a joke, the ‘paperless’ office is getting closer,” the article contains a case study of a small Austin, Texas administrative business (Breedlove and Associates) and its efforts to go paperless. It includes chilling quotes.

“It is that everyone—clients and staff—is sick of paper. The clients tend to be young, middle-class families…they are good with technology and already pay bills online, use e-tickets on planes, e-file their tax returns, and Google recipes rather than using cookbooks. And Breedlove’s 16 employees are in their 20s, native to Facebook and instant-messaging, and baffled by the need for paper. Now everybody is happier. Next year the firm expects to be completely paperless.”

The article concludes (spoiler alert), however, with the familiar-to-some analogy of the arrival of the “horseless carriage” and the horse population, and the fact that today’s society is home to approximately the same number of horses as 100 years ago, but they are used in radically different ways. So one might argue that paper could be used in ways that we are only now discovering, while being replaced nearly altogether in other areas.

I take the liberty to examine the state of printing about once a year, and thanks to my readers for indulging me yet again. Indeed, to me anyway, printing, or at least relying on traditional printing, does seem dangerous at the end of 2008.

Nevertheless, while trade-offs will occur, vendors will continue to find growth areas where they can prosper.
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Find more of my posts at Lyra Insider blog

While I continue to post here, at least monthly, and also direct my tweets this way as well, I also am a regular contributor at the Lyra Insider blog, including this post from last week, on the first of the end-of-the-year awards and Memjets honor.
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The Printed Blog ceases publication

The Printed Blog (TPB), subject of my April 2009 Observations (see "April 2009 Observations, Ultimate Countertrend -- The Printed Blog"), has closed down, according to an email I received this morning from Joshua Karp, TPB founder. The message cited a lack of funding sources, certainly not a unique issue in these times for startups.

Karp also has a farewell blog post well worth reading.
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July 2013 Observations Please Mr Postman











by Jim Lyons


My last full week of July this year has been dominated by thoughts of a much-awaited package, bound to arrive at my door at anytime. And with apologies to the songwriters and performers of the title song – including The Marvelettes, The Beatles and The Carpenters – I realize I should amend my statement to reflect 2013 standards, something along the lines of "Please, Federal Express Person" instead.

What it’s not
Actually, I can recall this feeling of anticipation because I’ve had it many times in the past when I’ve ordered and then finally received a nice new gadget I’d had my eye on for quite some time. But this one is different too. And in fact, in describing what it is, it might be easier to express it in terms of what its not. While my feelings of eagerness for it to arrive compares to emotions I’ve had for new iPhones, iPads, Kindles, Nexuses (Nexii?) and Chromebooks as I awaited their arrivals, this gadget I’m currently waiting on is really nothing like any of those. Rather than a mobile information/communication device, this item is a printer!

My first order, which would’ve been from the vendor’s first “batch,” was placed and accepted in 2012, but I canceled it – albeit reluctantly – because I was suffering a bad case of “gadget fatigue” (as in “it gets too exhausting figuring out all these different gadgets at once”; see that list above of all those products that have come my way in the last few years). But I made sure to clear my calendar this year and got my order in for the second build, waiting since April 2013 for it to arrive, all the while being teased by the company’s clever communications.

And yes, I have ordered and received many a printer over the years, but theyve mostly been work-oriented replacement products that may have represented an economic and/or performance upgrade but really offered very little, if anything, which one might consider new and exciting. And back to the “what it’s not” analysis (a very key point of marketing positioning and differentiation, as I often point out to my students), the product coming my way, although technically a printer, is also very big in the “not” department. It doesnt print in color. It does not include an integrated scanner or other attributes that would qualify it as an MFP. It is neither laser nor page-wide (i.e., inkjet) technology. It features no Wi-Fi connection, nor does it do autoduplexing. And beyond all that, its so “underperforming” that it doesnt even print on plain, letter-size paper. It does originate from outside the United States (leading to some of the extended shipping time), but it’s not coming from Asia. It’s being shipped direct from the manufacturer in England, and it’s a product thats not ordered out of off-the-shelf stock, but rather preordered from infrequent batch production runs.

The reveal – July 25, 2013
Some readers of this blog might have figured out by now that Im talking about the Berg Little Printer. After some final shipping gyrations involving United States Customs requirements, of all things, it arrived at my door today. Ive been covering, here and elsewhere (see http://jimlyonsobservations.blogspot.com/2012/02/february-observations-lessons-from.html), my impressions of the Little Printer’s appeal and its ability to create momentum in the social media world.

My February 2012 Observations discussed the Berg Little Printers Social Media appeal
But thinking about the long-time mantra in the printer industry to “create and sell solutions, not hardware,” that has been much easier said than done. The Berg Little Printer, despite its name indicating a hardware bias, is actually that rare hard-copy solution – a part-hardware, part-software combination – that appeals based on what it does and the image it conveys.

The payoff? A great branded solution can command very high margin and still generate customer excitement and loyalty. The $249 (including $30 for overseas shipping) that I paid for my Little Printer is just as much or more than many of those gadgets I listed previously, and for a black-and-white printer that prints on special 2-inch-wide paper – basically a receipt printer, if one does not look beyond the hardware.

But what we really have here is the embodiment of the famous marketing saying, “Where theres mystery, theres margin.” At Photizo’s Transform conference in May 2012, the keynote guest speaker was a recent VP of communications from Harley-Davidson. He offered so many of us in the room insights into magic, mystery, margin and the real lesson in that saying. Comparing how his former firm could produce such sought-after motorcycles that commanded double (or more) the price of equivalent hardware from other vendors, it became clear the differentiation was all about service, solutions, customer loyalty and stories.

The Little Printers overseas voyage was protected by t he proverbial brown cardboard wrapper
Similarly, Berg’s clever solutions has teamed “little printing” smartphones with social media, from the look of their product and marketing materials as well as the wit of their communications. (For example, the related newsletter played heavily on the concurrent news of the Royal Birth also coming from England, with the headline “After a long labour, Little Printer is delivered. And it prints, by George!”
Berg and customers promoted the "arrival" with comparisons to that of the new royal baby
 So how does it work, you might ask? How do I like it, and can I recommend it to others? Well, Im just getting ready to open the box, set it up, plug it in and have at it. But after a few days – or, more likely, weeks or even months – I will report my findings, so stay tuned for future Jim Lyons Observations on using the Little Printer!

(This post also appears in the Jim Lyons Observations blog at The Imaging Channel.)




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Happy New Year and my personal new tech update

OK, just a quick year-end Happy New Year greeting to end 2012 and look ahead to 2013. But as the year ends, I wanted to set the record straight on some of my own personal technology portfolio decisions of late.

It took awhile but I am now in the iPhone 5 tent  (and yes those new earbuds are cool!)
In September, I blogged about my hesitation to move up to the iPhone 5, all based around its new connector and the feeling I would be fighting with my own households "installed base" of old-school Apple connectors (see "For Want of a Nail..."). Well, I caved, and am now a proud iPhone 5 owner/user. (The owner part came a month earlier than the user part, btw!) Will now be juggling THREE connectors for the foreseeable future, including old and new Apples and of course, microUSB for Kindles, Nexus, and even a cool extended battery/case accessory Ive been using for the iPhone.
After wavering, I figured out I really like Windows 7!
Around Thanksgiving, with less fanfare, I purchased, then returned a Windows 8 PC I had planned to use to upgrade the failed home office PC which had served us well for years. Actually, "returned" is not quite right - I kept the new hardware, as the reseller (Office Depot) couldnt swap it out with a new Windows 7 machine,  and instead I paid for their assistance in "downgrading" the HP desktop to Windows 7. (As a Microsoft Developer program subscriber, I have licenses for clean (i.e. now OEM crapware) Win 7 versions, and the downgrade - which I was advised is beyond the skills of simple advanced users - includes the advantage, and was priced the same as Depots "de-crapwaring" service for new machines.)

And spurning Windows 8 after my experience with its difficult interface (or at least learning curve) and certain inconvenient incompatibilities, Ive also just ordered a new Windows 7 machine (oddly still available from OEMs) for the office.
The Little Printer is cute and I want one, but still need some time
I also blogged recently about cancelling an order for another new gadget (see "Berg Ships Little Printer...") and have not regretted that. "Gadget fatigue" is real, at least for me lately, and while I suggested I might re-order this fascinating hard-copy product in early 2013, I will need to catch my breath from the routines with the new iPhone 5 and the Windows 7/8 back-and-forth first.

And with that, Happy 2013 to all of you!








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Air Asia Bad Internet Booking Service

This is the first time i feel frustrated with Air Asia service, when booking ticket via its online portal. Firstly after making payment the system automatically cancel the booking without any reason. Secondly when making a call to their customer service to complaint it cost me RM10 phone credit just for a few minutes to explain the problem to them. This is totally ridiculous, its like when calling to solve a problem at the same time adding more problems. Thirdly when the customer service personnel asking me to send an email to with a scanned copy of the transaction document to re-instate the booking. Now another stupid problem arise, the email bounced back with a message telling me that their mail box is full. So i have to make another call to informing them their email box is full. Come on lah!! Air Asia dont wait for the client to inform you whats wrong with your email system. And the worst just to tell them their email is full they charge another RM10 phone credit. Now i my extra total lost is RM20 + My time to call + Its not my fault that the system cancel the booking without notifying me.


AIR ASIA!!! Next time dont do this again. Its annoying + Frustrating + Waste of Time + Waste Money. Get your online system and email working at all time and get someone to take maintain it 24/7. Being cheap doesnt meant you want it to be the worst do you?
.

Complaint sent to: plfeedback@airasia.com
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Last day at Lyra Wide Format and Green presentation

“Wednesday Morning -- Wide Format and Green"

Wednesday morning, January 28th, 2009 the 2nd and last day of the Lyra Imaging Symposium kicks off with a “wide format” segment, with industry member Rak Kumar and Lyra Analyst Rocheleau.

First up with his presentation "Wide Format Trends and Opportunities" is Rak Kumar, Vice President and General Manager, Rastek. Kumar covered the history of the segment, technology trends and a “how we got here” synopsis, as well as current market opportunities and future directions. Basically it was the perfect industry pitch, in this blogger’s humble opinion. It was informative, included some excellent historical perspective and current market analysis, without overly extolling the virtues of his employer’s product and service offerings, more or less letting the companys advantages speak for themselves. An example graphic from Kumars pitch is shown below.



David Rocheleau, Vice President of the Lyra Consulting Group, followed with "The Evolution in Wide-Format Printing: A Market in Transition", and covered lots of ground. Some of his topics are presented in the slide below.



Charley LeCompte, president of Lyra, followed with the kick-off "Green" portion of the Symposium, in a presentation entitled "Green Is the Theme for Imaging Vendors".

With the progress made recently in wide format and its improved environmental friendliness, it was a logical transition to look into the Printer Industrys Green Initiatives and why 2008 turned out to be such a momentous year in activity and discussion.

LeCompte covered, among other topics, the first true eco-products – products whose primary selling point is an environmental advantage, including the HP Designjet L65500 – and its non-solvents approach and the Epson EDC-10, an inkjet printer introduced in Europe and China, with its 8000 page ink bags – with a 50 Euro deposit, though in China not touted for environmentalism; other 2008 landmarks such as HPs closed-loop cartridge recycling (announced during last years symposium and covered here); the aftermarkets players all trying to out-ecology each other; accelerated cartridge collection including Japans collection boxes sponsored by six leading vendors and located across Japan in post offices; and HP’s "Eco Highlights" Product Tag, also covered in this blog.

LeCompte then moderated a lively panel, featuring WooJin Kim, Charm Regent Ltd.; Brad Roderick, InkCycle; Stacey Wueste, Hewlett-Packard Company; and Tim Needham, SMART Papers. This blogger was surprised not by the many good ideas and positive proposals, but by the frequency words like "they" and "them" came up from at least one of the panelists, regarding potential regulatory action, and that same panelists assertion that somehow the industry brought its own problems on by initiating cartridge recycling just a few years ago. More informed industry members will know that cartridge disponsition (beginning in my memory with toner cartridges in the 1980s) has as much to do with value as waste. Its not just empty water bottles and detergent containers, but rather the salvaging of high value-added content in the ink and toner cartridges that make them desiralbe as potential refill/reman targets, in additont to the environmental logic of recycling.
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csrss exe information

The Client Server Runtime Server subsystem (csrss.exe) is a component of Microsot Windows NT OS. It mainly responsible for Win32 console handling and Graphical User Interface (GUI) shutdown (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Client/Server_Runtime_Subsystem). It is critical to system operation; thus terminating the process will result in system failure (Blue Screen of Death = BSOD). Under normal circumstances, CRSS cannot be terminated with the taskkill command or with Windows Task Manager.

Complete name : C:WindowsSystem32csrss.exe
Format : MZ
Format profile : Executable / Intel i386
File size : 6.00 KiB
Encoded date : UTC 2009-07-13 23:11:09


csrss.exe version

Length Of Struc: 0398h
Length Of Value: 0034h
Type Of Struc: 0000h
Info: VS_VERSION_INFO
Signature: FEEF04BDh
Struc Version: 1.0
File Version: 6.1.7600.16385
Product Version: 6.1.7600.16385
File Flags Mask: 0.63
File Flags:
File OS: NT (WINDOWS32)
File Type: APP
File SubType: UNKNOWN
File Date: 00:00:00 00/00/0000

Struc has Child(ren). Size: 828 bytes.

Child Type: StringFileInfo
Language/Code Page: 1033/1200
CompanyName: Microsoft Corporation
FileDescription: Client Server Runtime Process
FileVersion: 6.1.7600.16385 (win7_rtm.090713-1255)
InternalName: CSRSS.Exe
LegalCopyright: © Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
OriginalFilename: CSRSS.Exe
ProductName: Microsoft® Windows® Operating System
ProductVersion: 6.1.7600.16385

Child Type: VarFileInfo
Translation: 1033/1200

You may not see description on the Taskmanager to tell the csrss.exe process is belong to Microsoft Corp but actually its 100% genuine not virus or Trojan.
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Thoughts from the industry Static Control Amercan Ink Jet

We are now back in session following a mid-morning break. Following the usual information overload from the Lyra people, its now time to hear from two of our industry participants at the conference.

The Impact of Color and New Technologies in Remanufacturing Businesses, Steve Weedon, CEO, Static Control European Operations, and Executive Vice President, Static Control Components, Inc.
Steve commented on the changes in the industry, including importance today of polymerized toner, and the complexities of color. Notes on Static Controls CTL Replenishment System™. And "Huge Profits in Chipped Ink Jet Cartridges". He provided a background of "chipped heads", which are not factory seconds similar to scratch-and-dent products (!) but chips on print heads that lock out all but OEM supplies. Static Control has inkjet chips for all chipset tank and bag cartridges, including CLI-8/PGI-5, BCI-7e/BCI-9. The also have a new Chip Checker, launching at World Expo tomorrow (Aug 20). Challenges in the industry include a fast-changing landscape. Education is critical -- "High Quality Parts and supplies are essential to consistently build cartridges with OEM like print quality".

Ink Jet Technology Advancements, Michael Andreottolla, President & CEO, American Ink Jet
Started his presentation with some "Fun Facts" (my editorial homage to The Late Show with David Letterman). For example, he stumped the audience with "name the date" test -- the first practical experiments on inkjet printing? 1867! And 1878 for the first description of the basic physics of drop formation. Bringing us up to modern days, Michael highlighted, as industry-landmark products, the HP DeskJet 500 in 1984, the Encad wide format printer in 1990, the Iris continuous ink jet printer in 1987. Ink and Media Longevity -- back to the Wilhelm studies of 1991 (of the Iris), ongoing. Now were up to 200, 230 years, at least using pigmented inks, on certain papers, and put behind glass. Inkjet applications today include Digital Photography, Digital Fine Art, Proofing, Graphics & Outdoor Signage, Textile Printing and many Industrial Applications.
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Whats new with printer and printing blogs

I have three adds/deletes that are worth mentioning in the ever-dynamic ebb and flow of the printer and printing industry segment of the blogosphere (ok, Im being a little sarcastic here).

First, the Planet Print Mode site and its companion blog, have been suspended in favor of a new enterprise by their creator, Adam Dewitz. Having completed graduate work at Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT), Adam has started his own company, Adaptive Publishing, in addition to serving as WhatTheyThink.coms chief blogger, serving as Managing Editor
of the Print CEO Blog.

Second, a comment on a recent post of mine ("Book scanners as a consumer Item?") by a reader and fellow blogger Samuel Driessen linked me over to his mid-February post about "Paperless Home" over at Infoarch. Samuel is with Oce in The Netherlands and writes prolifically on information architecture "stuff" on his blog.

And last but not least, a newer blog has surfaced called, of all things, The Death of the Copier. Creator Greg Walters is just three posts in, but so far has coverage that includes interesting content and opinion on HP (NYSE HPQ) Edgeline technology, Managed Print Services, and paperless and green issues. I like the attitude, and thanks for the link! Keep it up, Greg!

And now time to update the old blogroll!
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HP Printer Metrics Q3 FY2009 Results

As is my quarterly tradition, heres a tracking table of HPs printer-related numbers released as part of the after-the-close announcement yesterday, August 18 2009.

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HP NYSE HPQ earnings now on May 20th printers on front burner

Originally, today (May 15th) was the scheduled announcement day for HPs (NYSE HPQ) second-quarter earnings. But a preliminary announcement was made on the 13th, along with the official clarification of the EDS (NYSE EDS) deal, and now the official numbers day has been pushed out until Tuesday the 20th.

So whats changed since the beginning of this week, when I posted in this blog, virtually crowing about the fact that printer results, could be front and center this time, even if in a potentially negative way? (See "A little pressure on HP (NYSE HPQ) printer results".) Well, later that same day (Monday the 12th), the word came that HP was considered an 11-figure deal to acquire Ross Perots old company, EDS, and ever since, no one has been thinking about printers at all, it would seem.

Thats not quite true, actually (i.e. the no one thinking about printers point). In a quick search of the Web this morning, PC World has a provocatively title piece, "Surprise! What HPs Multibillion Dollar Bid to Buy EDS Means for You" by Stephanie Overby of CIO. The piece contains this paragraph (my italics added) thats surely toungue-and-cheek, given IPGs profit margins, but still, what a difference a few days and a nearly $14 Billion deal makes!
Bulking up the services side would better HPs position against its bigger IT services brethren like IBM and Accenture . It could even enable HP to shed that darn printer business once and for all.
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CompUSA to close

Announced at the end of last week, the remaining CompUSA retail stores, as well as its ecommerce presence, will be closing after the holidays. Its the end of an era in PC and Printer retailing, for sure, but opinion around the Web (e.g. see "CompUSA is closing for good. Good.") seems to weigh against the retail chain and its customer-unfriendly approach.
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Quilting books from blogs

As my regular readers know by now, I cover the printer industry with a marketing view, which means I like to tune in to user (customer) needs and how their needs are satisfied by hard copy solutions. One site thats come to my attention, as it relates to my interest in the "blogs to books" arena, is the Serendipity Patchwork and Quilting blog. Brenda Gael Smith, owner of the blog, found my references to printing books from blogs (e.g. "My Blog2Print Book is in!") and linked to them from a post that included all the "usual subjects" in this area -- Blurb, SharedBook, Lulu, blogprint.com, and of course HPs efforts in blog printing -- most of whom Ive covered here at one point or another, and Ill send you their way for the company links. (see "Blog to Book Options".)

While one might argue this is only a tiny slice of the overall pie of blog-printing demand, thats kind of my point! I think its critical to understand individual market segments and their needs -- in this case, a handsome book printed from the online visuals of creative and beautiful quilt designs that satisfies the quilt fans "user needs" of permanence and sharing that only a book can offer. (Effective printing of individual blog posts might be critical for the purposes of hands-on quilting, where the post includes instructions and other ideas.) In my mind, this understanding of user needs is equally or more important in assessing market demand than the "how many blogs are there and lets assume x percent want to print them" approach! (Actually theyre not mutually exclusive -- both approaches are important.)
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Enterprise printing highlights

Steve Reynolds, Senior Analyst, for Lyra Research, did his traditional succinct but complete overview of this segment of the business, this year entitled “Developments and Strategies for Office MFPs”. One of his slides, of the semi-facetious but on-the-mark category, was his “Valuation Sheet” for medium- to large-sized copier dealers, in light of the distribution “shortage” caused by Ricoh’s acquisition of IKON in 2008 (yes, this topic comes up a lot). See Graphic. Another point raised by Reynolds was the “color reluctance” holding back color page growth, partly at least economy- (and cost-) related.



Paul Preo, newly-named VP, Workgroup and Industrial Printing at InfoPrint had a very comprehensive and interesting review of the Enterprise Printing environment, including popular Symposium topics such as the linkage between print management and “green” initiatives as well as A4 encroachment on A3 placements. He, like Reynolds, links slower color adoption (at least that the industry would like) to economic problems, but also sees some printing coming in-house and away from out-sourced printing, albeit in lower overall volumes. Preo recommends learning more at infoprint.com.

Printer Industry and Channel Players. Moderator: Ann Priede, Lyra Research. Panelists: Mike Dane, IKON Office Solutions, Inc.; Greg Lamb, Global Imaging Inc.; Kevin Prewett, Ingram Micro. Acquisitions having an impact? IM no, IKON yes (!), challenge is migrating from heavily Canon to all Ricoh. The wide format industry is newer (13-14 years old) so not as much talk of consolidation. IKON was the last national distributor out there, but it’s not over – next logical thing? Perhaps a Manufacturer consolidation? Some foresee one printer vendor buying another, or someone from outside the space coming in? In wide format space, EFI has made 13 acquisitions; they will continue to be active. Trends in leasing? Credit got tight, noticeably when GE Capital exited the market. Manufacturers are working to improve capital availability. Among some others in the wide-ranging potpourri of topics for the panel included channel conflict, the Circuit City bankruptcy, and Samsung’s impending major thrust into the business.
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Now hiring

A look at the Silverbrook Research site reveals some very interesting "help wanted" listings. Of course, Silverbrook and Memjet created one of last years big industry news splashes with their announcement and demonstration of disruptive price/performance points, based around their inkjet-based printing technology. (See my post, from exactly one year ago today, "Memjet business in HPs backyard". This followed their original announcement in March at a technical conference in Prague. See "March 21 -- First Day of Spring".)

But bringing it back to the present, a recent review of Silverbrooks several dozen job openings include those which relate to what we already know about Silverbrook (e.g. Imaging Researcher, Patent Attorney, etc) but also what we can guess are significant to the companys current priorities (Manufacturing Engineer, Reliability Engineer, Test Engineer, etc). Note to industry members who may be looking -- all the openings all seem to be in Australia.
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How to sync blogger post in Facebook Notes

Getting more traffic to read article that you write is what blogging is all about. Otherwise it is not exciting as there are no one to read or engage what you have written. One of the ways to do this is using Facebook social network site. Usually Facebook audiences are those who are more closer to you as the network groups are mostly friends and families. They are more like to engage in your blogs as feel sense of common interest towards what you do.

Basically there two places to automatically sync blogger post in Facebook using the same method "Facebook Notes". The first place to sync blogger post is the main profile page of your Facebook and the other one is Facebook custom page. How to do it follow the step below.

Post automatically on the Facebook Notes main profile page:

1. Facebook "Profile"⇒Notes
2. Click "Write Notes"
3. Click on any of the Facebook Notes options i.e. "My Notes"
4. Click on the "Edit Import Settings"
5. Go to your blog address i.e. http://howtodosteps.blogspot.com
6. Scroll down to the bottom page of the blog and look for "Subscribe to: Posts (Atom)> Right click on the post atom and copy the url address i.e. http://howtodosteps.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default
7. Paste it on the Facebook notes> click "Start Importing". Done!!
8. Try to make new post on your blogger and go to your pagebook profile page you will see it will automatically post


Post Blogger on Facebook page (assumed Facebook page already created)

1. On Facebook left side bar click "Pages"⇒Select page
2. Edit Page⇒Apps
3. Notes>Go to App (If not yet enabled click Edit Settings)
4. Write Notes>Click any options i.e. My Notes
5. Edit Import Settings
6. Go to blogger blog⇒Scroll down to bottom page and get the URL from the "Subscribe to: Post (Atom)
7. Paste to Facebook Notes "Web URL" Start Importing. Done!!
8. To test: Try to write a post on blogger and go to your Facebook page. It should automatically post on the Facebook page Wall.


Note: Other blogs with RSS feed URL such as Wordpress, Typepad, Livejournal, etc also can be post automatically to Facebook Notes. Having Facebook page if you have particular topics where people are engage in group discussion.
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Xerox Phaser 8400 8500 8550 8560 Error Codes 09 0xx ink loader replacement

If your Xerox Phaser 8400, 8500, 8550, or 8560 is displaying the following errors, you may need to replace the ink loader.
Error codes starting with:
09,035 09,000 09,008 09,018 09,036 09,005 09.015 09,025
09,037 09,006 09,016 09,026 09,038 09,007 09,017 09,027

Xerox Phaser 8400 Ink Loader:  Part# - 200-4698-80.    
Xerox Phaser 8500/8550 Ink Loader:  Part# - 133K27711.    
Xerox Phaser 8560 Ink Loader:  Part# - 133K27771.    

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How to open or dismantle Sony Ericsson W700i casing

It looks easy but it requires the right tool and a little of trick to open the Sony Ericsson W700i phone casing. So lets do it!

Tools you need:

1. Torque Screwdriver: T3 size
2. Flat/Philips head screwdriver: 1.5mm size

Get this special screwdriver set only for $5, good for small electronic device repairing. It consist of Torque (T3, T4, T5, T6, T7, T8, T10, T15, T20), Pozidrive (PZ0, PZ1), Philips (1.5, 2.0), Flat (1.0, 1.5, 2.0), TP2.3, M2.6, Y

Step 1: Open the battery cover and use Flat/Philips head 1.5mm screwdriver to remove the back casing screws. Then use the Torque screwdriver (T3 size) to open the front casing screws.

Step 2: This part require a little trick. Insert your thumb nail in between the gap of the back casing and the body. While doing that go around it 360 degree to lift off the casing clip-lock, make sure you have hard nails to do it. Or alternatively you can use sharp edge object like flat head screwdriver. To open the front casings do the same step.

Step 3: Now everything should be open up like this.

How to remove the outer screen protector: Some people may not realize that the outer screen is removable as it looks like it is one unit with the casing frame. Actually it is attach by glue or thin layer of double tape adhesive. Just push it from down under to get the screen protector out.

If the camera is not functioning, there is high possibility that the camera shutter is spoiled/faulty or broken. If this is the case then very difficult to fix it because there are no replacement parts, unless someone willing to sell the part from their faulty Sony Ericsson W700i.
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Firefox 3 5 available today print enhancements mixed


The tech world is buzzing about the new Firefox, version 3.5, and its seemingly flawless launch today, allowing up to 2 million downloads in less than a full business day.

But like a lot of other extensions, the popular printing-related add-ons are a mixed bag in terms of being ready for the new version. A search at the Mozilla site shows the popular "Print Print Preview" not available, though runner-up "Universal Print" is ready to go -- an opportunity?

And the HP (NYSE HPQ) print-enhancement extension, Smart Web Printing 4.0, already installed in my Firefox plug-ins list, came up showing its not compatible, though the issues that Smart Web Printing addressed became academic with the introduction of 3.0 (See further explanation in "HPs Reduce Printing Tool for the Web", from a little over a year ago).

Not that these out-of-date (for now) extensions are in such bad company -- TechCrunchs MG Siegler (in "Firefox 3.5 Soars Past A Million Downloads. Approaching 100 Downloads A Second") notes that 3.5s perceived speed improvement (Ive noticed too) may be attributable to all those missing extensions!
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Time covers Zink

In this weeks Small Business "special section", under the heading "Tales of Triumph and Turmoil", an article entitled "Ink Inc.", by Time magazine writer Jeremy Caplan features the Polaroid PoGo printer, and its key technology supplier, Zink.

While the PoGo printer is covered prominently, the focus of the piece, appropriate with its positioning in the magazine, is Zink, the company Ive featured here numerous times (for example, see "February 2008 Observations: Zink Partnerships Make Really Big News".)

Jeremys piece discusses the Zink business model:

The company, based in Bedford, Mass., is so confident of its intellectual property that it isnt even making its own machines. Instead, Zink is modeling itself on Microsoft and Intel, licensing its technology for use in other manufacturers devices. Why battle Canon, Epson and Lexmark when they could become your customers instead? "If Intel were captive to one brand, it never would have become the great brand it became," says Zink ceo Wendy Caswell. "The same goes for Microsoft."


And I really like that hes has captured Zinks entrepenuerial "all-for-one, one-for-all" side, which Ive picked up on in numerous interactions with the company:

Like most start-ups, Zink has wrestled with growing pains. When the company received its first set of paper packs from a packager, some had the wrong number of sheets. Rather than send the sets back, Caswell put 30 employees on an assembly line to weigh the 30,000 packages and fix the lemons. Chemists, engineers and others along the corporate ladder chipped in. "Everybody does the dishes here," Caswell says. But if Zink technology catches on, the same employees could be dining out soon.


And also, of course I like that Im quoted in the piece. Thanks Jeremy Caplan and Time!

___

Interesting to note, too, the timing with the Zink coverage and the kickoff of Fall Demo 2008. Zink first caught my attention (see "Zinking in from Demo") at the Conference series Spring 2007 edition.
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Back in Rancho Mirage Lyra Imaging Symposium 2012

As the "official blogger" of the Lyra Imaging Symposium for a number of years now (though not all 15!), I will be at it again, but this year, over at the Imaging Insider blog. Well post a daily summary there, but offer more "real time" bite-size pieces on Twitter.

While you can keep track of my Symposium tweets in the right-hand column here, suggest a more effective way is to track the hashtag #Lyra12 on a conventional Twitter app or the web site itself (twitter.com).
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Good fishing spot Telaga Air

From Kuching i was driving along the Matang road to visit the Matang family park, but i changed my mind and decided to explore further. So i ended up in Kampung Telaga Air which i never knew before. Its a Malay village located just near the river side and i guess thats where it gets the name.

Upon arriving at the Kampung, there was community activity happening in that place. And obviously after spotting Barisan National (BN) political party flag then i guessed i know what was going on. Apart from that there was fishing competition going on and i saw the participants list caught some 11 kg to 12 kg of ikan kerapu (Grouper fish). Other fish being caught by the participants are like ikan gelama and buntal. Until then i realized this must be a good spot to fish.

There is also Jetty built towards the river for the convenient to fish. Along the river bank on the village side also concrete walking pathway for visitors to enjoy the view of the environment.

One day i will definitely revisit this place bring along my fishing gear to catch IKAN KERAPU (Grouper).






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Apple Cards vanishes amid flurry of new iPhone news and reaction


First off, credit for the story about the demise of the Apple Cards app goes to @GigaOM and writer Alex Colon (@alexandercolon). I came upon it during my morning "whats new" search, where it was a part of their "4 things you might have missed during Apples iPhone 5s announcement" piece.

Seeing the news, I had to go back to when it was announced, two years ago, on October 4th to be exact, in an event that preceded the death of Steve Jobs by just a day. Later that month, I wrote a Jobs tribute/retrospective, in which I covered some of his pioneering and initiative with hard-copy-related products, and I included Cards as the latest in that timeline. (See "Steve Jobs Invented Desktop Publishing - and Photo Books too?")


Now a day after Apples most recent announcement event and its multiple (5c and 5s) iPhone products, which have left Wall Street unimpressed, we have to dig out the tale of Cards and its two-year existence. And while investors and industry pundits see the new phones as uninspiring, its likely very few if any are including the Cards apps discontinuation as part of the overall disappointment which has led AAPL stock to tumble over 5% so far today. But that figures - as hard copy in many of its forms seems to be going out of a favor more with a whimper than a splash.
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Most Effective Flu Blocked Nose Medicine Nasonex Nasal Spray



This is one of the most effective flu medicine by far compare to any others out there that i know. I got this Nasal Spray (Nasonex) liquid flu from a friend who happens to have it from the General Hospital. I am not pretty sure if the pharmacies out there are selling this as it is clearly stated that this is a control item by the ministry of health and probably you can only get it from the Sarawak General Hospital in our local state of Sarawak.

Another friend of mine who happens to know about Nasonex said that this could probably cost around RM100++ if it is sold out there. However since the SGH is a subsidized government hospital you can have it around RM5 by doctors prescription.

The usage is very simple just spray the liquid into your nose and all the blockage caused by the harden mucus will be liquidized very fast.
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What a difference or not seven years makes!

When I updated my spreadsheet the other day, I started seeing some trends

The other day, after catching up with filling in my "HP Printer Metrics" spreadsheet (and announced it with a blog post), I started thinking about differences and similarities in the printing and imaging industry over the last seven years, and wondering if there would be any evidence of changed industry dynamics over those years, just from a look at the high-level metrics, and from the industry leader who despite all the moving parts "underneath the hood" puts in a remarkably consistent financial performance, year-in and year-out.

The first quarterly set of figures I included in the spreadsheet was from Quarter One, 2006, and now with the 2013 version in the books (remember HPQ starts their Fiscal Year on November 1st), I took a quick look at the numbers, side-by-side. Quarterly revenues in the seven years fell by about 10%, to just below $6 Billion. And 2013s Q1 showing at $5.9 Billion was the first sub-$6 Billion result since since the $5.7 Billion posted in Q3 of 2009, which was the second sub-$6 Billion quarter in a row, with Q2 2009 matching the most recent quarter at $5.9 Billion. And of the 29 periods in my spreadsheet, Q2 and Q3 of 2009, and Q1 of 2013, are the only three quarters NOT above the $6 Billion benchmark. So with all the optimism after HPs last quarter, one would have to say the business formerly managed under the "IPG" banner is not all that healthy, just looking at the revenues.

Profits actually were also less in Q12013 than those reported  in Q12006, but by a very small margin, and less, percentage-wise, than the revenue difference. Unlike revenues, there is not a dramatic "threshold" like the $6 Billion which is so rarely not exceeded, though the $1 Billion mark in profits is a median tide line which seems to divide good and bad quarters. And of course, that there is a strong correlation between overall profits and supplies revenues (r=.66) is not surprising.
Back to looking at revenues, and the three components reported on by the company, which are supplies, commercial hardware, and consumer hardware, a divergent picture unfolds when looking at the "six years later" quarterly revenue. The supplies business is steadiest, and actually shows growth of nearly 7%, which being in nominal dollars, would probably not represent "real" growth. Commercial hardware declined by nearly 20%, and the consumer hardware quarter-to-quarter comparison shows a whopping 44% decline. A few factors come to mind in explaining these trends - supplies revenue growing, with a (theoretically) continually growing installed base which remains thirsty for its related ink and toner supplies, even with gradually declining average per-unit pricing; commercial hardware slipping gradually, based on eroding demand in office printing, but having stemmed the tide of overall decline with an upward expansion into graphics arts; and general and increasing decline on the consumer side of the hardware business. Speaking of consistency, one last look at this macro-level data really tells a story. When plotting the quarterly revenue "growth rate" on a year-to-year basis, I was stunned to see only four "phases" of positive and negative compares. Beginning in 2006, prior to the "Great Recession", things were in the black, followed by a period of sharp declines which were economically based, with a recovery period lasting six quarterly, and declines over the quarters since. Most of the changes are of the "single-digit" variety, with the exception of the 2008/2009 period, but clearly something has changed. One could argue that the cyclical, economy-based decline was actually less worrisome than the flatter, current period, perhaps driven less by factors like business levels and employment, and more by behavioral and cultural shifts away from printing and hard copy, during what has become what may be called the "mobile revolution" as we look back.
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