Are the memes about setting up and troubleshooting printers overblown nowadays?
I haven't really messed with printers in probably 15 years or more, but it felt like any time they were brought up, there were two flavors: Older printers, which decided if they wanted to work or...
I haven't really messed with printers in probably 15 years or more, but it felt like any time they were brought up, there were two flavors:
- Older printers, which decided if they wanted to work or not based on absolutely nothing at all
- Newer printers, which are covered in DRM and mostly a nickel-and-diming scam
Now, for the former I remember having some issues, but generally just clearing the printer's cache (or whatever it was called) would fix most of the problems. I think the bigger issue is that I always helped people set up cheap Walmart-sold inkjet printers that had more hardware issues than software, along with ink that would go to shit instantly.
But I was out today at a thrift store and they had a Brother for $25, with an entire extra unopened toner cartridge (I think that's what it's called?). I asked them if it worked, they said it did, but if it didn't I could return it by tomorrow.
So I brought it home, assuming something would be wrong with it, but in about 10 minutes I had it plugged in, connected to my wifi network, and connected to my computer. I tried scanning-- it worked fine. I tried copying-- it does that no problem. It took longer to install the drivers on my PC than set up the printer itself.
So are printers really as straight-forward as I experienced with this cheap used one, or am I just lucky?