Standard hundred-dollar desktop 8.5-by-11-inch inkjet printer. Prints from basic black-on-white text to full-color, full-bleed photographs (see reviews) using cartridges that cost anywhere from $20 to $35 depending on source.
Allows printing index pages and full-bleed prints directly from media card. The printer has a several-format cardreader built-in, and it supports SD/MMC, CompactFlash, MS/DUO, and XD memory sticks. What's better, is that this very same cardreader ACTS AS A USB THUMBDRIVE DEVICE IN LINUX so you can use it to pull the pictures straight off the camera's memory card onto the hard drive without having to clutter up the desk with another USB device.
It autodetects paper type and width using some kind of LED/laser (similar to that of an optical mouse) built into the print carriage.
Printer cost when new at Office Depot: $130
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DRIVER INSTALLATION
Uses Photosmart D5100 driver in cups / gutenprint
I'm installing it as I type this.
*Install cups, foomatic, hpijs, dependencies, kitchen-sink
***For Debian: I have the following packages installed. You may or may not need all of them.
cupsys cupsys-common cupsys-driver-gutenprint cupsys-pt foomatic-db foomatic-db-hpijs foomatic-filters hpijs
*Go to http://www.openprinting.org/show_dri...i?driver=hpijs and select from their PPD-O-Matic the 5160 PPD file. Save to disk.
*Go to http://localhost:631 in browser.
*Make selection to add a printer.
*For me, there was a button saying "Add this printer" in the "new printers found" section of the page. I hit this button.
*On the next page, select to use your own PPD. Enter the path or browse to the PPD file you saved.
*Hit "Add Printer" at bottom, enter credentials for authorized (eg. root) user, and printer installs successfully (for me, at least).
Now you can set printer options. Defaults work for me, for general everyday web-page printing. For photoprinting, set the obvious. You're on your own here. Google is your friend. I suggest playing with these settings and then immediately printing off a CUPS test page from within CUPS in the web browser, and note the differences in the color wheel, gray ramp, and 1-degree radials. It can surprise you. Then, try it with different paper types.
So far, my only disappointment in this printer is the fact that I occasionally need to unplug it and plug it back in in order to use it as a cardreader.
mount /dev/sda1 -t vfat /media/usb0/
...mounts my Kodak C743's SD card just like a thumbdrive. In fact, I can even stick my USB thumbdrive in the PictBridge USB port and mount it the same way. I then browse to
/media/usb0/dcim/100kc743/
to get my photos from the card. No messy USB interface program to the camera to fight with -- just insert the card into the printer and mount it.
Alternatively, I can insert the card into the printer and have it print a Photo Index right from the front panel. No need for a computer. Then I can select which images I want to print and what size/layout on the page (with some understandable limitations) without any need for a computer either. Of course, for full control, just mount the card and go to town with the GIMP or whatever other photoediting programs there might exist and print the layout you want.
It's an excellent printer, too. Most of its functions are done in hardware, AS IT SHOULD BE, making it an excellent candidate for use in a multi-platform environment such as one using both Linux and that other OS (OS X).
It's coolness goes a step further: IT PRINTS DIRECTLY ON MATTE-WHITE-LABEL CDs (that are a bit cheaper than LightScribe discs, which are monochromatic besides)! Get the "glabels" program, google for the CD templates, and go to town!
Photos that come out of this machine are almost indistinguishable from those you get at Wally World or the corner drugstore. The only difference, aside from the word "inkjet" on the back of the paper, is that blacks and other very dark colors have a slightly different reflectiveness, just like you see in magazines. However, you have to have the light source reflecting directly off the page and into your eye... Mounted in a frame, you CAN NOT TELL it came from a bubblejet.
Go buy yourself a good paper cutter. You're going to need it once you get into putting 8 wallet-size photos on a page in the GIMP.
In an improperly formed, incomplete sentence:
Professional results at an amateur's price!
Of course, now that I've praised it, it's time for mine to start messing up on me... that's the way things normally work for me, at least :-/
HP Photosmart D5160 Printer (Q7091A#ABA)