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Home > HP Officejet Pro 8000 Wireless Printer
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HP Officejet Pro 8000 Wireless Printer
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Show more by hp
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- Laser Quality Print Speed Up to 15 ppm Black/11 ppm Color, Maximum 35 ppm Black/34 ppm Color
- USB 2.0, Built In Ethernet, WiFi 802.11g/b Standard Connectivity
- 32 MB Memory and 384 MHz Processor Speed
- 250-Sheet Input Tray, 150-Sheet Output Tray, Automatic Two-Sided Printing Standard
- Up to 8.5 x 11 in Borderless Printing
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Want a printer that offers the convenience of wireless networking? Our Officejet Pro 8000 is right for all printing. You will get professional-quality color at up to 50% lower color cost per page and using less energy than laser printers, and get impressive business documents using automatic two-sided printing.
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Customer Reviews: Add Your Own Review |
Warning: HP's hand will be in your pocket., October 23, 2010
By bilagaana (USA)
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I really have no complaints about the print quality or the setup of the wireless function. The reason this printer is going to the recycler is the cost of operation due to HP's decision to gouge consumers on replacement ink cartidges.
If you look up the unit price on replacement cartridges, it does not sound unreasonable: roughly thirty USD for the black cartridge and twenty USD each for the three color cartridges. However, what you need to be aware of is that the printer decides when the cartridges need to be replaced and WILL NOT FUNCTION until you comply. This is becoming a standard industry practice but, in my experience, is particularly egregious with this HP printer. It is no coincidence that all four cartridges are flagged as needing replacement at the same time. As this happens, at the least, twice a year, you will be spending close to two hundred dollars a year to maintain even minimum function.
After literally a mere few months, using the ""high-capacity"" XL cartridges and extremely rare use (I print no more than six to eight pages per month), this printer is once again disabled due to an entirely fictitious low-ink warning. This function is clearly not triggered by actual use, the number of pages printed or the volume of ink remaining. It is based entirely on an algortithm combining some arbitrary time since installation and HP's greed.
Again: The resident software decides when you will replace the ink cartridges (of which there are four) and it will not print so much as a single page until you do.
This will be my last HP printer.
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