Available at Staples: An uncluttered and time-saving HP four-in-one color printer, scanner, fax machine, and photocopier for the office

The following is a sponsored post from Staples about a product we support. We’ve been aggressively testing this product and the review is based on our first-hand experiences. We agreed to work with Staples because they sell so many different products in their stores, and our arrangement with them allows us to review products we use and have no hesitation recommending to our readers. Again, these infrequent sponsored posts help us continue to provide quality content to our audience.

This spring, HP released a series of new four-in-one color printers exclusive to Staples — the Pro X line. Not too long afterward, we received an HP Officejet Pro X576dw to review. We were interested in this new line of printers for a number of reasons, but one of those reasons is that it’s being marketed as the “world’s fastest color desktop printer.” It actually holds a Guinness World Record for speed, and we thought that was something we wanted to test for ourselves.

The HP Officejet Pro X576dw is $800 and is intended for active use by small- and medium-size businesses. It’s wireless, so everyone in the office can use the same machine. This means instead of buying each employee a scanner and printer, you can save your company a good amount of money with a shared device. Being wireless, it also means you can store it anywhere that is convenient for all of your employees.

And, it really is fast. When I hit print on my computer, it immediately starts printing, and the pages come out at a rate of up to 70 pages per minute (that’s for basic, single-sided printing). The printer we were using before this wasn’t even half that number and it wasn’t color. The HP Officejet Pro X576dw can print, scan, and copy both sides of the paper, so it saves us money by also not wasting paper. It uses what HP calls “PageWide technology.” According to HP, that means it “delivers four colors of Original HP pigment ink at one time onto a moving sheet of paper. As the paper moves, the printhead remains stationary, allowing the HP Officejet Pro X Series to print quickly and quietly.” In short, it moves the paper instead of the ink.

In addition to saving time, it saves money, too. It’s Energy Star qualified and the entire unit consumes less energy than a laser printer. It’s also half the initial cost of a laser four-in-one printer with relatively comparable features. It uses high-yield ink tanks (which you can also get at Staples) that result in fewer and less expensive ink tank replacements over the life of the machine in comparison to a laser printer. You save money at initial purchase and then over the lifetime of the machine.

The setup process is simple. While the machine runs its initial automatic internal configuration, you just use the touch screen on the front to type in the network password and make preferences. You don’t need an installation CD or any high-tech knowledge to make it work.

A few of our favorite functions:

  • You can email the machine things you want printed and copied. If you’re out and about, you can send an email from your smartphone and print documents so they’re available when you and your clients arrive back at the office.
  • I really like the Stamps app, which allows you to print postage through Stamps.com directly on the printer. With the help of a trusty scale, I weigh what I need to send, use the app to print a stamp for the exact postage amount, and then hand the package to the mail carrier. I’ve stopped going to the post office, saving myself a lot of time.
  • For its size, it has a really big paper tray. It holds a full ream of paper (500 sheets), while our previous printer held less than half a ream (200 sheets). It’s genuinely nice not to have a partial ream of paper hanging open in our office supply closet all the time. It sounds silly, but unopened reams stack much more cleaner than open ones.

Exact product specifications and more technical information can be found on Staples’ website. But, on the whole, we are really impressed with this four-in-one printer. It greatly exceeded our expectations, especially with saving us time and money over the longterm.

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The shoes that made Michael Jackson’s anti-gravity lean possible

In 1993, Michael Jackson, along with Michael L. Bush and Dennis Tompkins, filed for a patent on the..(Read…)

Daily Obsesh: Shark-Bite Hem

imageCheck out how this silk dress has multiple on-trend design features. This carefree silk dress boasts a flowy silhouette that ends in a contrasting shark-bite hem patterned in a whimsical blue print. We are loving how this dress can be formalized with a simple pair of strappy heels. The print on the hem is beautifully eye-catching. Make sure you rock this dress with a simple black clutch. You won’t want to take any attention off of this gorgeous number!

Android 4.3 Jelly Bean Gets Official

Google also announced the next version of their mobile OS, Android 4.3 Jelly Bean, which comes with..(Read…)

Korshun Footwear: Shoes made without any glue or stitches fashionably merge style with sustainability

Korshun Footwear


by Dora Haller Dutch footwear designer Anna Korshun creates leather shoes that don’t require any glue or stitches. Almost magically constructed, the upper and outer soles are clicked together and…

Continue Reading…

Dezeen Music Project: Change by Wave Crushers

The music we used on the soundtrack to today’s movie about this year’s Blickfang designworkshop is a track called Gettin’ Funky by Wave Crushers, which we featured on Dezeen Music Project in June.

Here’s another great house record by the same producers, released by German label Aux Audio. We think it might be even funkier than their previous track.

Listen to Gettin’ Funky on Dezeen Music Project »
Watch our movie about this year’s Blickfang design workshops »

About Dezeen Music Project | More tracks | Submit your track

The post Dezeen Music Project: Change
by Wave Crushers
appeared first on Dezeen.

Trendlet: Stacks on Stacks on Stacks

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Don’t call them layers. What we found this week were stacks—perfectly conceived piles of objects as inventive as they are inviting.

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To compose his Stack chair’s casually tossed cushions, the Milan-based designer Stefan Krivokapic varied their thickness, color and alignment. Designed for the Italian furniture purveyor Contempo, the cushy arrangement rests atop a metal and wood frame, which makes the seat look at once stable and slippery. It’s a tower of mattresses worthy of a princess—with or without the pea.

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Chelsea Town House by Moxon Architects

London-based Moxon Architects has completed a contemporary glazed extension to this Grade II listed town house in south-west London.

Chelsea Town House by Moxon Architects

Moxon Architects added a new top floor to the house and a rear extension on the lower ground floor to increase the total volume by more than a quarter.

They transformed the property by removing internal partitions and reconfiguring the layout, creating fewer rooms that provide larger open-plan living spaces.

Chelsea Town House by Moxon Architects

“The driver for this scheme has been to treat the existing structure as a geometric guide for the setting out of new material and spatial interventions,” the architects said.

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A two-storey atrium brings natural light into the lower ground floor and contains a limed oak staircase.

Chelsea Town House by Moxon Architects

The staircase has an inbuilt library, retractable writing desk, secret compartments and library steps.

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The lower ground floor opens onto a rear courtyard garden.

Chelsea Town House by Moxon Architects

Moxon Architects has previously converted a former coach house and concealed it behind a steel fence with recesses for climbing plants.

Chelsea Town House by Moxon Architects

Other residential renovations we’ve featured recently include a converted loft space with combined staircase and bookshelf, and a crumbling stone stable that’s been converted into a family home in Spain.

Photography is by Simon Kennedy/Moxon Architects.

Here’s more information from Moxon Architects:


Chelsea Town House

Moxon Architects have completed a grade 2 listed house conversion in Chelsea. The driver for this scheme has been to treat the existing structure as a geometric guide for the setting out of new material and spatial interventions.

Chelsea Town House by Moxon Architects

The space has been radically reconfigured throughout, to provide a fewer number of larger and better rooms, with additions to the top and bottom of the house increasing its volume by over a quarter.

Chelsea Town House by Moxon Architects

The original structure is retained internally as traces within the new layout – differential materials and finishes follow the extents of the previous structure across the walls, floors and ceilings of the new space.

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This geometry sets up a framework for the use of the space: circulation and use has been established within these geometric confines, whilst simultaneously the house has become lighter and more open, reflecting the needs of the client.

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The limed oak staircase overlooks a new double height which brings light deep into the lower ground floor and includes a high level library, pull out writing desk, secret compartments and library steps.

Chelsea Town House by Moxon Architects
Basement plan – click for larger image
Chelsea Town House by Moxon Architects
Cross section – click for larger image

The post Chelsea Town House
by Moxon Architects
appeared first on Dezeen.

Skateboard nunchaku and mustachioed fins by Stevie Gee

Nuovi lavoretti del mio preferito Stevie Gee. Le pinnette spaccano totalmente.

Skateboard nunchaku and mustachioed fins by Stevie Gee

Skateboard nunchaku and mustachioed fins by Stevie Gee

Skateboard nunchaku and mustachioed fins by Stevie Gee

Skateboard nunchaku and mustachioed fins by Stevie Gee

Skateboard nunchaku and mustachioed fins by Stevie Gee

Skateboard nunchaku and mustachioed fins by Stevie Gee

Wilier Triestina 101 Air by Different Lab

Il video girato e diretto da Different Lab sulla Wilier Triestina 101 Air mi ha fatto venir voglia di averne una in garage. Bravi.