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Post by stealth3si on Oct 28, 2011 23:28:59 GMT -5
These things can be done if the right OS is used.
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Post by sweetangel22 on Oct 29, 2011 9:04:09 GMT -5
These things can be done if the right OS is used. To the member I am quoting is the following thing I posted in this thread on Oct 28, 2011 what you are answering in the quote I am quoting from you. If I am wrong on what I said than let me know this.-What I would like to know is has any member been able to do any or all of the following such as choose pictures themselves to print with a printer by checking off a box for each picture you want to print, choose what size print(s) you want to print, choose the type of paper you are using to print the pictures onto, choose if you want to see a preview of what will be printed before it's printed so if you don't like how it will print than you can go back and fix anything you want to fix, etc. I asked the things in this paragraph of this post because I believe either the computer I am using or the printer program that I installed from a CD Rom that came with the HP printer I use lets me do the things I mentioned. To the member I am quoting if I am right on what I said in previous paragraph in this post than are you saying it's the OS that lets a person do any or all of the things I asked that a person can do before they want to print pictures from a computer and it's not the program that can be installed to a computer from a CD Rom that came with the printer that does what I am asking in this paragraph of this post. If I am wrong on what I said than let me know this.
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Post by stealth3si on Oct 29, 2011 23:39:33 GMT -5
I don't think Windows 2000 does that. Probably XP though.
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Post by sweetangel22 on Nov 12, 2011 10:17:12 GMT -5
I was wondering if any member who reads this post has noticed and or knows the answer to any of the following below.
I was wondering if any member who reads this post has ever noticed after installing one or more ink cartridges (either from the manufacturer of the printer you are using or from another place that sells ink cartridges) in a printer that the program that is put on a computer that is used with the printer you use either shows the ink cartridge(s) that was installed into the printer is out of ink or shows the ink level for a ink cartridge(s) that was installed in a printer as the previous ink cartridge(s) ink level when printing something with that printer. I mentioned what I said in this paragraph of this post because I know someone who has bought ink cartridges from more than one place that is not the manufacturer for the printer they use and the program that is used with that printer shows there is no ink in both the color and black ink cartridges even though there is ink in both ink cartridges. I also mentioned what I said in this paragraph of this post because I have bought ink more than once for the HP printer I am using and I have seen the ink levels for both the color and black ink levels showing the right ink levels and also showing the previous ink cartridges ink level when printing something with the HP printer I use. What I said about the HP printer I use has happened to me with ink cartridges I have bought from two different places that is not from HP.
I was wondering if any member who reads this post knows why what I mentioned in the previous paragraph of this post happens when installing ink cartridges that were not bought from a company that made the printer a person is using.
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Post by stealth3si on Nov 13, 2011 0:18:40 GMT -5
It has something to do with whether or not the cartridges are HP official.
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Post by sweetangel22 on Nov 13, 2011 9:54:30 GMT -5
It has something to do with whether or not the cartridges are HP official. To the member I am quoting why is the reply you gave in the quote I am quoting from you an answer to something I asked in a post in this thread on Nov 12, 2011. To the member I am quoting is the reply you gave in the quote I am quoting from you the same answer you would give for any brand of ink cartridges. To the member I am quoting if I had bought printer ink cartridges from HP than would what I said in a post in this thread on Nov 12, 2011 not happen. If I am right on what I said than why would printer ink cartridges from HP not cause what I said in a post in this thread on Nov 12, 2011.
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Post by stealth3si on Nov 14, 2011 2:16:42 GMT -5
That's what it makes it detect the level of ink.
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Post by sweetangel22 on Nov 14, 2011 11:16:12 GMT -5
That's what it makes it detect the level of ink. To the member I am quoting are you saying in the quote I am quoting from you that if a ink cartridge(s) a person bought for a printer they are using isn't a ink cartridge(s) from the manufacturer of the printer the person uses than the program that is installed on a computer and is used with the printer a person is using will not detect the ink level(s) correctly with a non manufacturer ink cartridge(s). To the member I am quoting if I am right on what I said in the previous paragraph of this post than why would ink cartridges from a manufacturer of a printer detect the ink levels correctly, but ink cartridges not from the manufacturer of a printer a person is using may or may not detect the ink levels correctly. Is there something on or in the ink cartridges from a manufacturer of a printer that lets the program that is installed on a computer that is used with the printer detect the ink levels correctly. If there is something on or in the ink cartridges from a manufacturer of a printer than what is on or in the ink cartridges that does what I am asking in this paragraph of this post.
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Post by stealth3si on Nov 15, 2011 0:53:21 GMT -5
They have digital signature inside of them.
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Post by sweetangel22 on Nov 15, 2011 10:03:03 GMT -5
They have digital signature inside of them. To the member I am quoting is what you said in the quote I am quoting from you about digital signature how ink cartridges from a manufacturer of a printer is how the ink cartridges can detect the ink levels correctly. If I am wrong on what I said than let me know this. To the member I am quoting what is a digital signature. To any member who reads this post I was wondering if a person decided to refill a ink cartridge from the manufacturer of a printer they are using than will the program that is installed on a computer that is used with the printer the person is using still detect the ink levels correctly when the refilled ink cartridge is reinstalled into the printer the person is using. If what I am asking in this paragraph of this post does not happen than why is that,
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Post by stealth3si on Nov 16, 2011 1:36:01 GMT -5
They have code inside of them that tells the level of the ink.
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Post by sweetangel22 on Dec 25, 2011 8:26:26 GMT -5
If any member who reads this post knows the answer to the following below than it would be nice of you to share the answer to the following below.
If any member who reads this post has ever used a printer that has a scan feature than I was wondering if you know what could cause any scan to be saved as PDF. I asked what I asked because one day in the past week I did 3 scans with a HP printer I currently am using and one of the scans that saved was saved as PDF, but the other 2 scans didn't save as PDF
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Post by stealth3si on Dec 25, 2011 23:43:47 GMT -5
It has built-in software.
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Post by sweetangel22 on Dec 26, 2011 10:20:24 GMT -5
This is to the member stealth3si or to any other member who reads this post. If you know the answer to any of the following below than it would be nice of you to share the answer(s) to what you know below.
I was wondering why any printer that has a scan feature has built-in software that allows a scan to be saved as PDF.
I was wondering if any member who reads this post knows what scan option I chose for a scan I saved one day in the past week to save as PDF.
I was wondering why anyone would want to save any scan as PDF.
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Post by stealth3si on Dec 28, 2011 1:19:34 GMT -5
pdf is a popular format
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