Great guide on finding a good printer
Zack, I found that information useless for my purpose. I have backed up my computer, now I need to know how to use stuff stored on my zip drive. Can anyone help me?
I had my computer backed up to a WD external Zip Drive 320. They restored my hard drive to like new. Only thing is, I am stupid and have no clue how to use the programs I have backed up to the external zip drive. Can anyone tell me how to in dummie English? Where do I click and what do I choose? Thanks in advance for any or all help.
why can't I view "Zach's" video on hard drives?
Thank you zach very good video and info.
BUYING PRINTERS: There are printers that really cheap, but it will cost you an arm and leg for their consumable cartridges. Check out the prices of the cartridges first then look for the printers that use them. In the long run expensive printers will save you money on the cartridges. This is how they make a lot of money by offering you cheap printers.
Some of the 'bottom loaders', so to speak are built so inexpensively that they don't even have a tray that you can fit the paper into and slide the tray back into the printer. I had one by HP that, thought the print was excellent, I had to discard in the name of sanity. The paper was to be loaded into two 'sockets' on either side of the printer's lower half and then the machine would supposedly detect its presence and load it a sheet at a time. Inevitably the HP would detect many more than one needed sheet and one was constantly hopping up from the desk PC to the place there was room for the printer in order to correct the incessant error of chewing-in too many sheets of paper. Finally, and most unwillingly, I had to buy myself another printer - a Lexmark 3500-4500 series - which though inexpensive certainly ranks amongs one of the best continuously operating printers I've owned in f
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