@wigglytuffitout @lapis has their lineup changed so much?
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Like its also not an inkjet printer is a laser printer and most of the parts that are likely to wear out quickly are built into the massive toner cartridges by design specifically to avoid the kind of problems you get with an inkjet printer. @wigglytuffitout @lapis Not all parts prone to failures are "planned obsolescence" delicate mechanisms prone to wear are sometimes necessary. I'd rather have user replaceable parts than a black box I need to buy a whole new one when any one component fails on me. @Rasp @lapis Yes dear, as I mentioned, sewing machines are following much the same trend and this is correlated strongly to additional features. It's why I wrote about how your jammy luck may be connected strongly to the relatively low technical demands the printers had to meet. If you want to actually read any of what I wrote instead of just deciding that you are the main character and everyone else needs to be proven wrong. Or wank off into the sunset. Your choice. @wigglytuffitout @lapis oh I know and it sucks. but thats why if I was going into the market for one that's one thing I'd look for. ...I'm not trying to do any of that? I'm not even disagreeing with the joke I'm just talking about some different experiences I've also had that were less negative? I never refuted the problem or the joke? I'm not sure where you got that. All I've done is talk about my laser printer that I really like and some better experiences of the old days before things went to hell. (okay they still sucked but not quite this bad) I'm not sure where you're getting the rest of this stuff from? It happened to me plenty back when I worked in IT and I never denied it happening to anyone else? I never said the joke was wrong the joke is dead on. I thought it was funny why I boosted it in the first place? |
@Rasp @lapis given the increasing "internet of things" mentality... Yeah.
There's likely more stability in business and industrial models - like the behemoths you'll spot in college libraries, which are there to be workhorses driven long and driven hard. However home models are trending towards being more inconvenient and more about, well, delivering one user experience and that's about it. If you're someone who can immediately have everything work out when the Wi-Fi-only printer meets your network, and then the driver integration is similarly flawless, and all you really need is basic printing services... Then the one-size-fits-all model works. Any deviation from that - wanting a wired only connection to even just set up the printer, needing more complex types of printing which will demand that driver being up to snuff, having a computer that is somehow different to what is expected in some various specification including iOS - then it's a complete crapshoot and a whole lot of people lose.
Honestly you should be proud of your amazing luck there with having a reliable older model (that has not yet succumbed to planned obsolescence) that does what you need and has drivers that immediately work with your Linux setup. It is known that even in the best of times, Linux/Unix/etc is drivers hell. It's often eventually workable, if you have a computer science degree and know how to patch together your own fixes (and have the luxury of affording the time to spend troubleshooting this and finding the fix). Sometimes the solution is relatively easy and starts with "open W.I.N.E.", sometimes the solution is "there is no solution, have fun". And that's honestly often for fairly basic printing needs half the time; the more complex the job, the more that support sharply drops off from both official drivers and people problem-solving in online communities.
Basically you've led a very charmed life in that respect lol, because even though brother printers are ones I generally prefer and have the least amount of problems with, well, the problems still very much exist and are incredibly widespread as to become a cultural touchstone level joke (as illustrated in the comic that lapis shared). Thank the universe for your good fortune and know that you don't need to be skeptical about it because this indeed does exist lol.
@Rasp @lapis given the increasing "internet of things" mentality... Yeah.
There's likely more stability in business and industrial models - like the behemoths you'll spot in college libraries, which are there to be workhorses driven long and driven hard. However home models are trending towards being more inconvenient and more about, well, delivering one user experience and that's about it. If you're someone who can immediately have everything work out when the Wi-Fi-only printer meets your network,...