You can literally buy an inkjet for £30, use it once with the dribble of ink that it comes with, never need to print anything again for 5 years and buy another £30 Inkjet to do it.
It’s cheaper and less bothersome than any other options for those that next to never need to print.
If you’re printing that infrequently, you could easily have your stuff printed elsewhere. But even for people that rarely print, a laser printer is going to be your best bet. It uses black plastic dust it melts to the paper, so it can go for years without “drying out” because there’s nothing to dry out.
You are not logged in. However you can subscribe from another Fediverse account, for example Lemmy or Mastodon. To do this, paste the following into the search field of your instance: !technology@lemmy.world
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
You can literally buy an inkjet for £30, use it once with the dribble of ink that it comes with, never need to print anything again for 5 years and buy another £30 Inkjet to do it.
It’s cheaper and less bothersome than any other options for those that next to never need to print.
Wouldn’t it be cheaper and better for the environment if you print at your local library or office store?
If you’re printing that infrequently, you could easily have your stuff printed elsewhere. But even for people that rarely print, a laser printer is going to be your best bet. It uses black plastic dust it melts to the paper, so it can go for years without “drying out” because there’s nothing to dry out.