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  • Epson Is Exiting the Laser Printer Business

    Epson Is Exiting the Laser Printer Business

    Epson has announced it is exiting the laser printer business, citing environmental and business concerns.

    Laser printers may be the preferred option for office environments, but customers will have one less choice as Epson exits the market and throws its full weight behind inkjet technology. The company said it will end all sales of laser printers by 2026, coinciding with increased investment in its Heat-Free inkjet tech. The company will, however, continue to offer existing customers repair parts and other consumables.

    “We’ve long been committed to sustainable inkjet technology and have now decided to phase out sales of laser printer hardware,” said Koichi Kubota, general administrative manager of Epson’s Sales & Marketing Division. “As a company we’re totally committed to sustainable innovation and action, and inkjets simply use less energy and fewer consumable parts. While laser printers work by heating and fusing toner to a page, Epson’s Heat-Free inkjet technology consumes less electricity by using mechanical energy to fire ink onto the page.

    “Our printing business will from now put the focus on inkjet, leveraging our propriety technology to deliver efficient, sustainable print solutions for our partners and end users.”

    The news follows a study the company conducted in 2019 that shows a tremendous difference in the environmental impact between inkjet and laser printers.

    “As Epson’s inkjet printers do not use heat in the printing process, they consume far less power than laser printers,” the company writes. “Epson’s inkjet printers consumes up to 85% less energy than a similar-speed laser printer which means for a typical office that requires frequent printing, this can amount to distinct savings in their annual energy bills[1].

    “Epson inkjet printers also produce up to 85% less carbon dioxide than those of comparable laser printers2. This means that for every 6 cedar trees required to absorb the amount of carbon dioxide as a result of using a laser printer, an Epson inkjet printer requires only 1 cedar tree.”

    The company also makes clear that inkjets are also the better option for customers, since they require far less replacement parts over the lifetime of the printer.

    “In terms of waste generation, Epson inkjet printers come with fewer components that need replacing, making it more convenient to operate as it requires only changing the ink and waste ink box versus toner, drum, developer, fusers and more components for laser models,” the company adds. “This is not a tiny detail as – with up to 59% less replacement parts compared to laser printers3– it results in a significant reduced impact on the environment over the lifetime of a printer.”

    Kudos to Epson for demonstrating that the responsible choice can also be one that is good for consumers and putting that choice above profits.

  • Epson HUD Glasses Released, Powered By Android

    Holy cow, these HUD gadgets are really happening, aren’t they? Whispers about a set of Google HUD glasses have ping-ponged around the internet all year yet there’s not been any kind of official confirmation from the company. But while all of our radars were trained on what was or wasn’t going on with Google, Epson was quietly toiling away at its own set of Android-powered HUD glasses and – pow! – here they are.

    As if to fiendishly wave at Google after passing the company on the HUD specs race track, Epson, which is more commonly recognized as a maker of fancy printers, put a heavy emphasis in the press release that their new gadget, the Moverio BT-100, is the “world’s first Android-based see-through wearable display.” Sting.

    In addition to an open-armed welcome for developers to create Android apps for the glasses, here’s some of the other specifications of the Moverio:

  • A six-hour battery life.
  • Built-in slot for a microSDHC card.
  • Transfer content, games and apps to the included 4GB microSDHC card or internal 1GB of storage on the controller.
  • Built-in Wi-Fi connection.
  • Mobile surround sound delivered via earphones (you can use the earbuds included with Moverio or use your own)
  • A nifty trackpad that accompanies the glasses that allows navigation among content.
  • As mentioned, you can strap a pair of these warlocks across your face today but they’ll run you a cool $700. See the demo video below to get an idea of how future you’ll look with these glasses on your noggin. While the Moverio is not the Terminator-vision overlay that we expected in our 80’s-centric imagination, it’s probably a good thing Epson passed on that aesthetic.

    Now that someone else has released a set of HUD glasses, I wonder if Google will rush to get theirs out onto the market now or if they’ll wait to see how the Moverio is received by con releasing its glasses.

    Anybody out there foresee yourself buying a pair of these glasses eventually? What do you think of the Moverio’s design? Have your say in the comments.

    (Via 9to5Google.)