Samsung set out to design the un-printer and came up with the ML-1630, a personal monochrome laser that looks more like a Frank Lloyd Wright House-and has a similarly idiosyncratic personality. It's not very practical, but it is, at least, inexpensive, and adequate for light office or home use.
Samsung's ML-1630 monochrome laser printer looks like two glossy-black slabs, one hovering over the other. Most of the printer is contained within the thicker, lower slab. The only nod to necessity is a clear plastic tongue that inserts into the front to catch pages as they print. The input tray is low-capacity (just 100 sheets), takes letter-size
You'll find what passes for a control panel on the top slab: a ticker-tape-like grid of LEDs that flash words or graphic patterns; a smattering of error icons that light up as needed; plus a couple of illuminated, touch-sensitive icons for cancelling jobs or turning off the aforementioned items (but not the printer, as you might assume; that button's in the back).
To supplement this Times-Square-like light show, an icon of the printer, installed in Windows' system tray, brings up on-screen status alerts in plain English and includes buttons that lead to helpful, context-sensitive troubleshooting guides; driver settings; or online supply ordering. The PDF-based User's Guide is helpful and detailed, though it suffers sporadically from bad translation.
Can this thing print? Yes. Text pages appeared at an average rate of 17.2 pages per minute, while photos topped out at a reasonable 6.2 ppm--good clips for a home or small-office model, though the HP LaserJet P1505, which has the same price,
The ML-1630's consumables are as compact as the machine itself--which also makes them costly. When you finish the 1000-page starter cartridge, the 2000-page replacement will cost you $69--or about 3 cents per page.
The
Melissa Riofrio