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reuber1
03-22-2007, 04:10 PM
Anyone else hear of this?

http://texyt.com/silverbrook+memjet+technology+available+desktop+ph oto+wideformat+hp+edgeline+comparison
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New inkjet printer technology that analysts believe will revolutionize the imaging industry was unveiled today by secretive Silverbrook Research.

The company has released astounding videos of desktop, photo and wide-format printers that print pages and photos 5 to 10 times faster than products from current printer market leaders HP, Canon, Epson and Lexmark.

“This thing is gigantic, we've been in this business for 20 years and I've never seen something as mind boggling,” says Charles LeCompte, president of leading printer market analysis firm, Lyra Research.

“The technology will be available in products in late 2007, starting with a 100mm printhead that will be used for home and retail photo printing as well as label printing devices. An A4/Letter printhead will be available in 2008 with many different components and technology improvements planned for the future,” the company announced today.

HP, Canon and other printer manufacturers are described as "potential customers", by Memjet Technology, the main company established by Silverbrook to market and license the technology. The company expects the printers to eventually cost $200 or less, sources say.

The cheap A4 desktop printer with a color printing speed of 60 pages per minute shown in this video is just one of the revolutionary new devices promised by Silverbrook, a company which holds more than 1400 patents, but has never released a product. The video was released today by Memjet Technology. Analysts from leading printer market research firm, Lyra Research Inc say they have personally examined prototypes of the desktop printers and verified that they work as Silverbrook claims

Other products that Silverbrook says will be made possible by the new technology are a $150, desktop photo printer that prints 30 photos per minute (shown in the video above). This is more than 10 times faster than all existing desktop products, and 2 to 3 times faster than the speediest competitor, HP's new Edgeline printer, which is not available in a retail product for ordinary consumers.
HP's competing printer costs $16,000

While Edgeline could be the closest competitor to Memjet in terms of speed, it appears to be far more expensive.

The only HP Edgeline printer announced for sale on the open market, the multifunction CM8050, costs $16,000 according to HP, and $21,000 according to a retail outlet which advertises the printer as 'available in the near future'.

In fact, a spare paper tray for the HP edgeline printer currently costs more than $2,000 - ten times the $200 analysts say is possible for Silverbrook's desktop inkjet printer (Silverbrook itself says only that the price will be under $300). It is not clear when the HP CM8050 will be available, as HP has removed the product page from its website recently.

Silverbrook's assault on the market

In almost 3500 patent applications over the past decade, Silverbrook has described an incredible array of potential products. These include a full colour printer module small enough to fit into a mobile phone, digital camera or even into handheld games like the Sony PSP or Nintendo DS. Silverbrook's working prototype of this miniature color inkjet printing module is shown here in this low-quality snapshot.

Other patents describe large scale printers to print wallpaper and textiles. According to Lyra Research, Silverbrook believes the radical technology can scale from handheld devices right up to huge commercial printing presses that could print magazines and books.

The desktop printers as described by Silverbrook have a “price/performance ratio that is off the charts”, says Steve Hoffenberg of Lyra Research.

Low printing cost claimed

Silverbrook has forecast printing costs for the 60 page per minute desktop printer at below $0.02 for black text, and under $0.06 for color pages (with 20 percent ink coverage), according to Lyra Research, which had early access to prototypes.

The desktop printer's individual color ink cartridges hold 50ml of ink, an almost unprecedented amount in a consumer product, and will sell for less than $20 each, the company predicts. Most existing inkjet printers from companies like Epson use ink cartridges with a capacity of about 10ml, and prices of $15 to $30.

"Silverbrook expect costs of ink and media supplies will be pushing new lows. They're not looking to subsidize their costs with high ink prices, instead they want more of a balance," says Steve Hoffenberg, Lyra's director of consumer imaging research

The privately-held company has not disclosed the identities of investors, but states that "No existing printer company has any stake in the Memjet Companies".

Analysts have suggested that Silverbrook could license its technology to outsiders who are trying to break into the printer market. Dell, which already has a printer business, but owns little of the technology behind it, is one name that has been mentioned.

Radical new technology

The ultra fast speed of the printers is partly due to their 'pagewidth' format. Unlike conventional inkjets, the printhead spans the full width of the paper and does not need to shuttle from side to side. The A4 or letter-size desktop printer's printhead is a full 8 inches (21.3 cm) wide and contains 70,400 ink nozzles. This microscope photo shows a tiny section of the print head - each of the small white circles is a single ink nozzle.

The ink nozzles are arranged in lines, with 1600 nozzles per inch. These can produce more than 2.5 million ink dots per square inch of paper in a single pass. (The screen you are reading this story on has approximately 10,000 dots per square inch). These tiny nozzles can fire out ink droplets smaller than one picoliter (one millionth of a millionth of a liter). This produces tremendously sharp prints, say analysts.

The very small size of the ink droplets is important, because it helps the ink dry in less than a second. This is a critical factor in high speed printing without smudging.

The printhead is made up in four-inch units. These are themselves assembled from smaller pieces, 20 mm long, which are built using a semiconductor fabrication process, similar to that used to make CPUs and graphics chips. The photograph on the right, shows an 8-inch silicon wafer on which these 20 mm print head sections are visible

Please refer to Texyt.com's exclusive first article on Silverbrook Research and its Memjet technology for background information on Silverbrook Research and its founder, Australian inventor, Kia Silverbrook, and a look at some of the patents behind the invention.

See this article for more on Memjet, including its predicted disruptive effect on the printer industry

Can this remarkable technology actually succeed in the market? See also our look at Memjet's print quality, intellectual property issues, and competition from HP's Edgeline.

Please search our earlier articles for much more information on the background to this story.
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reuber1
03-22-2007, 04:24 PM
Dammit, the link just went down, but I still got the page up. I'll copy and past the details.

reuber1
03-22-2007, 04:32 PM
There updated.

reuber1
03-22-2007, 04:43 PM
I can't edit my first post now for some reason, but here's a link that works...

http://memjet.com/media.aspx#

Check those suckers out.

Mynock
03-22-2007, 04:44 PM
Page not found, come on reubs you're losing it.

reuber1
03-22-2007, 04:46 PM
Page not found, come on reubs you're losing it.
Hey, I got you covered. All the details are in the first post.

The page was found by a co-worker via Slashdot, and now nothing on that page is working, so I'm thinking they're getting a ton of hits right about now.

Mynock
03-22-2007, 04:54 PM
You have an edit limit now. You can only edit up to a half hour or so from orginal time of post. Looks pretty fast, but I'm not sold until I see a hard copy for quality and what it costs. I still want one. I wound about what type of media varation you have available. I don't have time to read the article. I just watched some of the videos on their site.

reuber1
03-22-2007, 04:59 PM
From another article within that article (seems to be working now...may be off and on though)

Early print quality 'satisfactory'

“The print quality I've seen so far I would say is satisfactory, in general,” says Steve Hoffenberg of Lyra Research, who was allowed to examine prototypes at Silverbrook's labs recently.

“Although its not as good as some of the best ones I've seen out there,” he says, “what I've seen so far has been from prototype print heads that weren't fully calibrated and early versions of the firmware.”

“It's clear that the print quality already is good enough that we don't anticipate there'll be any problem getting to the real production level that will be required for these products to come to market.”

Despite the unprecedentedly high speed, the printer is in many ways much simpler than existing technology. “The pagewidth printhead gives very precise registration, there are fewer mechanical problems with the paper moving,” says Hoffenberg.

captain spanky
03-22-2007, 06:10 PM
sounds interesting....

PS Reubs... WTF is parepin?

reuber1
03-22-2007, 06:33 PM
sounds interesting....

PS Reubs... WTF is parepin?
Read here...

http://www.graphicdesignforum.com/forum/showthread.php?t=24903&highlight=alternate+reality+game

Total alternate reality game geekery. It's cool. :cool:

mojoprime
03-22-2007, 07:41 PM
holy spit. well, it's vaporware until it actually ships, but looks interesting. the Mulder in me, though, was looking at it like they were running already printed photos just through a printer paper path...