MILWAUKEE — Here’s a way you might save $20 this year: Change the font in the documents you print. Because different fonts require different amounts of ink to print, you could be buying new printer ...
The shift to work and school at home means the printer is getting more use. Ink refills are in demand, and they are not cheap. Many HP customers thought they had a great deal when the printer-maker ...
Different fonts use different volumes of ink to print, so you can make your ink last longer by changing your font. Printer.com, a printer-comparison site, tested several common fonts and ranked them ...
When HP announced its subscription plan, it sounded like a great promotion: free ink for life, 15 pages’ worth a month. Then in the fall of 2020, HP changed its offer and said it would begin charging ...
Studying ways to reduce paper and ink use for his school, a 14-year old teenager figured out that by switching from Times New Roman and other fonts to Garamond, organizations and businesses could save ...
A Wisconsin university has found a new way to cut costs with e-mail — by changing the font. The University of Wisconsin, Green Bay has switched the default font on its e-mail system from Arial to ...
Last year, printer comparison website Printer.com did an experiment to determine if choosing a different default typeface could help cut printing costs. After testing several common fonts available ...
I use CUPS to print to my ethernet-connected (via an HP JetDirect 300x print server) LaserJet 1200 from my SGI Octane (running Irix 6.5.7). This works really well, except the default font is too large ...
A 14-year-old student has published a study detailing how the U.S. federal and state governments could collectively save about $234 million a year by simply switching the type of font that is used on ...
No matter how often that refill is needed, Consumer Reports has ways to save on ink.