Look for printers with at least all the features you want. Then look at the yield you get per cartridge and divide that by the cartridges price and eliminate the most expensive yields. Keep in mind that the more expensive cartridges can be the cheapest ones if the yield is high.
Then check the printers that are left and see if their cartridges require chips and if so has it been reverse engineered. You want to make sure that 3rd party cartridges are available. If there aren't any, the printer manufacturer can decide when your printer is obsolete, so eliminate those too. Lean towards cartridges that aren't chipped at all; you don't want the manufacturer to sue the 3rd party guys and make your future supply go away... not to mention shame on them for chipping the carts in the first place.
Lastly check to make sure that there aren't any weird hoops you need to jump through to make it work on Linux.
Once you've gone through all that, pick the best one left... or the prettiest one... whatever tickles your fancy.
Brian Cluff
On 01/27/2018 06:04 PM, Michael wrote:
these are the printers the cartridges will work with
On Sat, Jan 27, 2018 at 12:44 PM, Michael <bmike1@gmail.com> wrote:
I can get HP or Canon.HP:CM2320CP2025Canon color image class:LBP7200CLBP7200CdLBP7200CNLBP7200CdnLBP7210CdnLBP7600CLBP7660CdnLBP7680Cx8350CdnMF8380CdwMF8580Cdw
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:-)~MIKE~(-:
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:-)~MIKE~(-:
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