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Laser Printers Let Authorities Track You

Laser Printers Let Authorities Track YouIt was bad enough when we found out these office workhorses were just giving you cancer, now they could be endangering your whole nefarious operation. Bad guys take heed, your laser printer might give you away. Turns out that many laser printers mark every page they print with yellow dots that are invisible to the naked eye. A company can actually use those dots to identify the serial number of the printer and you by association.

The dots were a reaction to government fears that high quality laser printers would lead to an outbreak of counterfeiting. However, privacy advocates, like those at the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), fear the identifying information might be used against political dissidents, whistle blowers, and printers of materials governments may want to track.

Most personal printers in circulation are ink jet printers and don't have the same identifying marks, but as prices have dropped laser printers have made their way into more and more homes. So next time you're going to print out sheets of Canadian dollars (American currency is no longer worth the paper it's printed on) you might want to avoid that speedy laser printer in the corner. [Source: USA Today]

Polaroid To Abandon Instant Film Products

Polaroid Corp., which introduced its first instant camera in 1948, is officially getting out of the instant film business, announcing today that once it produced enough film to last through 2009 it would shutter its last facility that makes the iconic develop-as-you-watch prints.

Like other companies long successful and entrenched in the film-making business, Polaroid has had its ups and downs in the digital age. It filed for Chapter 11 protection in 2001 as it tried to pursue a digital imaging future and was acquired by a private investment firm called the Petters Group in 2005. They stopped making instant film cameras for consumers a year ago.

As a result of this latest decision, the company is closing two production facilities in Massachusetts and laying off about 150 workers.

Now the company's name and famous logo appears on digital cameras, photo printers, and even LCD TVs. Its inkless digital photo printer introduced at CES has captured some early praise, although the market for home photo printers is uncertain.

From Bloomberg and The Boston Globe.



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Man Breaks Into Home to Print Counterfeit Money on Ink-jet Printer

Counterfeit 100-dollar bill
Thieves usually gather as many valuable goods as he/she can and get out the door as quickly as possible. Stopping to use the computer would be a big no-no. But, of course, we wouldn't be writing about this if someone didn't get caught.

Charles Nobles was taken in by police in Louisiana after breaking into a home and trying to use his victim's computer to print out counterfeit bills. Nobles broke into the home after parking his van in the woods behind the dwelling in broad daylight. Police received a call about a suspicious vehicle at 1:00pm and and immediately converged on the home, where Nobles was found printing American currency on the home owner's ink-jet printer. Nobles was arrested and is being charged with counterfeiting, unauthorized entry of an inhabited dwelling, and probation violation.

Even if Nobles had gotten away with breaking in and printing the cash, he would have been caught the moment he tried to spend his new-found fake wealth. We're sure he wasn't carrying special paper designed to feel like money around with him, and your average ink-jet sure isn't going to print a very convincing dollar.

From Fox News

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Wireless Portable PlanOn Printer Holds Paper, Too



Yesterday, PlanOn, the company that brought you the DocuPen scanner writing utensil, released for retail a one-of-a-kind portable printer, called the PrintStik. The tiny, mobile device, oblong and light, is a Bluetooth-enabled development that allows users to print e-mails and images from a smart phone, laptop or PDA. The technology is particularly useful for those of you who get annoyed with wires running wild when you're on the go, or for the professional who hates having to suffer in line behind Larry the Molasses Executive at those business centers just to print out a couple of pages.

The PrintStik is a self-contained unit, meaning you don't have to lug the 20 sheets of paper that fit inside. It prints at a leisurely three pages per minute, with the only other drawback being that you are not going to get a sheet of paper that might have come out of the printer at home. Instead, you will get thin, ticker-type sheets set with ink that looks like it came out of a random cash register.

Obviously, this product is not meant to turn out the annual report while you're driving to work. Instead, it is best suited for printing out things like directions or an E-mail from your handheld device.

We know, we know -- where and when, right? Expect to pay $299 for the PrintStik when you visit planon.com.

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Laser Printers as Bad for You as Cigarettes

Laser Printing: The New Black Lung?When it comes to economical printing and crisp text, it's hard to beat a laser printer. They'll spit out thousands of sharply defined pages on a single toner cartridge before needing replacement, all while hardly making a sound (and only dimming the lights a little). However, those benefits apparently come at a cost: your health. A new study from Queensland University of Technology indicates that laser printers emit clouds of fine particles when they're in use, particles that are similar to "cigarette smoke and motor vehicle emissions."

This means they're incredibly small and can get deep into your lungs and ultimately your bloodstream. Given that similar particles have shown to be factors in lung cancer, it probably wouldn't be a bad idea to open a window the next time you're printing out that manuscript of yours ... assuming you ever manage to write more than a page. Maybe you should just stick with poetry.

From Engadget

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Mom Tech for Mother's Day

No idea what to get Mom for Mother's Day this year? Sure, you could be obvious like Dad and get her flowers, or you could get her something she actually needs. With that mission in mind, the Switched staff asked their own Moms what, if anything, they could use make life a little easier. We've selected the perfect gifts based on their responses to bring you this cheat sheet to warming your own Mom's heart this coming holiday.

Dealing with Digital Photos

Mother's Day Wish #1
An Easy-to-Use Photo-Printing Solution

Dear Joshua,

I am struggling with getting pictures off of the digital camera. My wish would be to just be able to put the memory stick directly into the computer and let it automatically transfer the pictures. Then, I could print the pictures to send out. Help!

Love,
Mom



Dear Mom,

I'm giving you something that's even easier to use than a computer: The Sony DPP-FP70 photo printer. It's like having your own photo-processing booth in your home office.

The process is really simple, Mom, so don't be scared! Just pop your memory stick into the unit and you can preview the photos on the printer's screen. You can even touch-up and crop the pictures or correct for red-eye right on the printer. Then you just press the print button and all your snapshots come out looking like standard 4x6 photos like you would get from a developer. If you don't want to get into all that, it even has a one-button touch-up feature that will make your pictures look amazing automatically.

What's more, you can just connect your camera (or any camera that doesn't use a Memory Stick) right to the printer using USB -- you don't even need to use the memory stick if you don't want to.

Happy printing. And get to it -- you owe me pictures of my nieces and nephews!

Love,
Joshua


3-D Printers Come Home

3-D Printers Come Home
Though it sounds like something straight out of 'The Jetsons,' this year the first consumer 3-D printers will begin making their way into homes.

Capable of creating three-dimensional plastic objects from scratch, the technology paves the way for a future in which consumers will go online to buy things like toys, replacement parts or even toothbrushes, then simply print them out instead of waiting for delivery.

Printers capable of 3-D output are commonplace in industrial design, but at more than $100,000, they're out of reach for the average consumer. Later this year, however, a company named IdeaLab is introducing a model that will sell for $4,995. Another company, 3D Systems, will hawk its version of the home 3-D printer for $9,900. Both say prices will fall dramatically within a few years.

The printers work by melting down nylon powder, then creating models from the material layer by microscopic layer. Heat, light and chemicals are applied when necessary to shape and harden. After several hours of layering, a three-dimensional object has taken form.

While the applications for this technology are seemingly limitless, toymakers are particularly interested in the prospect of allowing gamers to create figurines based on their avatars from such online worlds as 'World of WarCraft' and 'Second Life.' EA has expressed similar interest for its massive online game 'Spore,' which comes out later this year.

As for us, we just can't wait until next year's Oscars to see what kind of replacement parts Joan Rivers prints out for her face.

From AOL News and The New York Times

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