Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Printer Tips: Remanufactured Cartridges

"Will a Remanufactured Cartridge Damage Your Printer?"
By Bill Snyder, CIO, Network World

Suppose Ford or Toyota would sell you a brand new car for, say, $500. Wow! Such a deal, you might think. But there'd be a catch: Every tank of gas would cost you $50, and you had to buy it from Ford or Toyota. Before long, you'd have spent a lot more on gas than you did on the car.

That's very much the situation facing consumers who use inkjet printers. The hardware is relatively cheap, but the cartridges are fairly expensive and they run dry fairly quickly, too. To save ink, you could print less or at a lower resolution, but why not do the same amount of printing at a lower cost and help the environment at the same time? That's the promise that vendors of remanufactured and refilled cartridges make. The question is, do they keep it?

You might expect me to say, "Remanufactured cartridges are a great idea--nevermind warnings about poor quality from greedy printer makers. You'll never know the difference between the two."

Well, I'm not going to say that. Last week I spoke to executives on both sides of the printer cartridge debate--one with Hewlett-Packard, another with a company that makes refill equipment. They were easy to reach and seemed reasonably frank, considering both have skin in the game.

My conclusion: You can save as much as 50 percent with refilled cartridges and 10- to 20 percent with remanufactured cartridges. For many routine print jobs that's a perfectly acceptable solution. However, some print jobs won't look as good or last as long without fading. And there's a chance that a poorly refilled or remanufactured cartridge will fail, make a mess, and maybe even damage your printer.


To get answers to these questions, please visit Network World's full article by clicking here.

Monday, May 3, 2010

CBT on Google Places

Find Carolina Business Technologies on Google Places. We look forward to reviewing customers feedback on our services and repairs, whether they came to our CBT's location in South Charlotte or we came on-site to service your office equipment.

If you are in need of a Rock Hill Copier Lease company or a Huntersville Printer Repair shop, CBT is the region's trusted source for office equipment sales, services, rentals and leasing!

Contact us for more information on how we can help you keep your office running!

Monday, April 5, 2010

Spotlight on the Copystar

Copystar offers businesses and home offices a cost-effective solution for your document management needs. Here at Carolina Business Technologies, we are dedicated to bringing your quality products alongside premier service when you need it the most.

We offer Charlotte Copystar:

Digital Copiers
Color Copiers
and Copier Rentals

Features include but are not limited to: sheet reversing, color scanning, up to 80 copies per minute and optimal finishing like stapling and hole punch.

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Meet Team CBT!

From owner to service manager and technician, the Carolina Business Technologies crew offers a wide array of expertise in the office equipment and repair industries.

Meet our team:

Phil Griffin

Cindy Griffin

Melissa Helms

Rob Foster
Bill Snyder
Carl Rubidge

Mike Spruill


To read our bios, please visit our Team page. If you would like more information on printer repair in Charlotte NC, Charlotte Samsung equipment or Rock Hill Copier Rental, please visit the appropriate pages!

If there is anything you can't find on the website, please contact our helpful Team and we can assist you in finding a solution! We look forward to hearing from you.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

The Office Copier is 50!

This article that we found on CNN, reminds us to wish a Happy Birthday to the birth of the copier market.

xerox_914.top.jpg

By Stephanie N. Mehta, executive editor

NEW YORK (Fortune) -- Long before digital tools such as listservs, e-mail blasts, and even Facebook enabled us to easily broadcast messages, photocopies were the most efficient way to distribute information to groups of all sizes.

If the boss needed to discuss a new company policy, workers got memos in their (physical) in-boxes or slipped under their office doors. Community newsletters, fliers for parties, and the oft-maligned Christmas letters in holiday cards were all made possible by the automated copying machine, which made its commercial debut 50 years ago.

"It was a democratizing technology," says Stephen P. Hoover, vice president of global software solutions for Xerox (XRX, Fortune 500). Xerox's 914 copier -- so named because it could copy a 9-by-14-inch document at a rate of seven copies per minute -- "gave people access to information and capabilities they just didn't have. It really changed how work was done."

Indeed, in announcing the 914 on September 16, 1959, Joseph C. Wilson, president of the company then known as Haloid Xerox Co. ("Haloid" was dropped in 1961), said in a news release: "Our girls [read: secretaries] love to use the 914 and have discovered many new copying jobs for it to do. For example, rather than type a complicated page full of statistics requiring nine or ten carbons, they have found it much faster to type the information on a single sheet and make copies on the 914. Thus they avoid the annoying, time- consuming job of correcting errors on nine or ten sheets separated by carbons.

"Besides, they feel great pride when their copies all look like originals."....

To read the full article, please click on the CNN link above.


If you are intersted in Rock Hill copier rentals or printer repair in Charlotte, NC, please visit the CBT Sales webiste!