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   Why the Brother HL-2270DW Laser Printer Sucks Less

   Josh Centers

   'I'm thinking printers,' said Tim Cook as he first took the reins as
   Apple CEO. 'Laser, ink-jet, double-sided, color, black-and-white ' the
   future of technology is in printers. I am absolutely convinced of
   that,' he said.

   OK, not really. The above quote was actually taken from [1]an Onion
   parody article written shortly after the resignation of Steve Jobs.

   But all jokes aside, and despite the popularity of Joe Kissell's
   '[2]Take Control of Your Paperless Office, Second Edition,' we still
   need printers. While every other technology seems to have improved by
   leaps and bounds, printers are still as terrible as they were a decade
   ago. In some ways they're even worse, with cartridges [3]specifically
   designed for early failure, ink being [4]nearly twice as expensive as
   Chanel No. 5 perfume, and most printers not even including a cheap USB
   cable in the box. (TidBITS publisher Adam Engst tells me that printers
   in the early days of the Mac were actually pretty good, with dot-matrix
   ImageWriters being built like tanks, and a variety of excellent, if
   pricey, laser printers from Apple, HP, and others.)

   When I purchased my first iPad in 2011, I thought I was done with
   printers. 'I can just save documents on my iPad to carry with me, no
   printing required,' I thought. That worked great, until I needed to
   print a shipping label. You can't tape an iPad to a package.

   I got by for a long time by using one of the many laser printers in my
   office, but I lost that option when I started working from home. We had
   an old [5]HP Deskjet 3050A all-in-one inkjet (print, scan, and copy,
   though no faxing), which even supported AirPrint, Apple's
   zero-configuration protocol for printing from iOS devices. I thought I
   was happy with the HP Deskjet 3050A, until a fresh black cartridge
   expired after a month and about 30 prints. That's the problem with
   nearly all inkjets ' fail to print regularly, and you'll end up with
   dried-out cartridges and clogged print heads at the worst possible
   time.

   That was the last straw. After what seems like years of consideration,
   I broke down and bought a black-and-white laser printer: the [6]Brother
   HL-2270DW (such a euphonious moniker!), which has long been
   [7]recommended by the Wirecutter. When I purchased the Brother a few
   weeks ago, it was on sale for $75, but even at its usual price of about
   $110, it's a good deal.

   To be brutally honest, like most printers, the Brother HL-2270DW
   stinks. But it stinks less than most of the competition, and it's
   cheap. For starters, it's noisy. Fire up the printer, and it will emit
   an annoying hum for several minutes until it goes back to sleep.
   Admittedly, the printing itself is slightly louder, but I expect that.
   The minutes of humming afterward grinds my gears. But once it's asleep,
   it's absolutely quiet.

   As with most of its kind these days, the Brother HL-2270DW does not
   include a USB cable, which isn't all bad, since it's Wi-Fi enabled (it
   also has a wired Ethernet port). But my advice is to [8]spend an extra
   $5 for a USB cable, as the wireless setup on the Mac is excruciating. I
   spent a couple of hours trying to get it to work, to no avail. However,
   after hauling my MacBook Pro across the room to connect it to the
   printer, re-running the setup application, and choosing the USB option,
   I was up and running in minutes.

   Speaking of Wi-Fi, I should note that this printer sadly does not
   support AirPrint. Initially, I thought I might be able to work around
   this by plugging it into my AirPort Express base station and sharing it
   from there, but no, Apple hasn't seen fit to layer AirPrint support on
   top of the AirPort base station's wireless printer sharing. So if you
   frequently use AirPrint, the Brother probably isn't the printer for
   you.

   If you print only occasionally from an iPhone or iPad, you could
   instead run [9]handyPrint (free) or [10]Printopia ($19.95) on your Mac,
   either of which provides a virtual AirPrint printer that can route
   print jobs to your wireless printer. The downside of these options is
   that your Mac must be on whenever you want to print.

   Like almost every printer, the Brother ships with a 'starter' toner
   cartridge that prints only up to 700 pages. I don't intend to print
   much, so I can live with this, much as it's clearly a way of increasing
   revenues from the printer while maintaining a low list price.
   Replacement toner cartridges [11]run about $45 and yield 2,600 pages,
   which equals about two cents per page. The drum unit, which transfers
   the toner to the paper, has a lifespan of about 12,000 pages. Being
   that the drum unit [12]costs about $111, more than the printer itself,
   I'll probably just buy a new printer when that day comes.

   But what about printing itself? That's where the Brother shines. Once
   the printer wakes up, it fires out sheets of paper at 27 pages per
   minute. Text is crisp, as you'd expect from a laser printer, thanks to
   its 2400 by 600 resolution. It has a 250-sheet paper tray for letter or
   legal size paper, and a manual feed slot for thicker paper. Finally,
   the printer features a duplex mode that prints on both sides of a page
   automatically, but using it tends to result in slightly curled pages,
   so if you're a heavy duplexer, this probably isn't your printer.

   What about color prints? I realized that I very rarely need to print in
   color. In fact, the main time I require color is for photos, something
   that inexpensive inkjets do poorly anyway. Sure, a high-quality Epson
   inkjet can print dazzling photos, but by the time you buy the printer,
   good paper, and Epson's official ink (knockoff inkjet cartridges often
   work badly or not at all), the cost per page is excessive. My local
   Walgreens prints photos for pennies, and they're ready to pick up in
   minutes.

   For now, then I can recommend the Brother HL-2270DW monochrome laser
   printer for many people. Like every printer, it has its problems, but
   it's wireless, fast, solidly built, and inexpensive to purchase and
   operate. Printers may not be sexy enough for Apple to ever revisit, but
   for millions of regular people, they're a necessary evil.

References

   1. http://www.theonion.com/articles/new-apple-ceo-tim-cook-im-thinking-printers,21207/
   2. http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/paperless-office?pt=TB1190
   3. http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20050222/1220232.shtml
   4. http://visual.ly/printer-ink-most-expensive-liquid-world
   5. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0057UAB34/?tag=tidbitselectro00
   6. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00450DVDY/?tag=tidbitselectro00
   7. http://thewirecutter.com/reviews/brother-hl-2270dw-best-laser-printer/
   8. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00004Z5M1/?tag=tidbitselectro00
   9. http://www.netputing.com/handyprint/
  10. http://ecamm.com/mac/printopia/
  11. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B003YFHCKY/?tag=tidbitselectro00
  12. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B004PL6GWQ/?tag=tidbitselectro00