Printer
HP Photosmart D110a ePrint printer earns 5-star reviews despite lacking ePrint… wait, what?
See the bullet for HP’s new D110a Photosmart e-All-in-One that says, “HP ePrint for printing anywhere.” Well, you can ignore that for now. While HP proudly lists ePrint — the ability to print PDF, JPEG, and MS Office documents received as attachments from any email-capable device — as a flagship feature on its newest line of web-connected printers, it’s not a working feature and it won’t be until a software update is pushed out at the end of the month, according to support forums
HP ePrint really works: eMails and attachments printed from the cloud (video)
We don’t blame you if you missed this the first time round , but HP’s ePrint service is probably best seen in action anyway.
HP Photosmart e-All-in-One with ePrint now on sale: iPad printing, solved
We don’t cover many printers on Engadget because, frankly, they’re boring. So there must be something really special about HP’s Photosmart e-All-in-One D110a, right? Indeed, it’s the first of a new line of web-connected printers from HP to feature ePrint , the ability to email messages with attachments (Microsoft Office documents, PDFs and JPEG image files to name a few) to the printer from any device including smartphones and tablets — no driver or app required
Palm files 8-K with SEC on merger, VP of PR Lynn Fox leaving
Okay, we’ve got lots of Palm news tonight, so take our hand and let us walk you through it. For starters, the company filed a 8-K report with the SEC today, which is a requirement when major changes (e.g.
Nexus One gets USB host driver from a dude with an oscilloscope (video)
For Sven Killig, running Android 2.2 wasn’t enough. No sir, this dude wanted even more power for his Nexus One, so he went ahead and penned a few lines of code that have allowed his Googlephone to act as a USB host
HP CEO: "We didn’t buy Palm to be in the smartphone business"
You’d think spending a billion dollars on a smartphone company would indicate a desire to, say, make and sell smartphones, but you’d apparently be thinking wrong: HP CEO Mark Hurd just told investors at the Bank of America Merrill Lynch tech conference that his company “didn’t buy Palm to be in the smartphone business,” and that he’s not going to “spend billions of dollars trying to go into the smartphone business; that doesn’t in any way make any sense.” Yes, that sound you’re hearing is Jon Rubinstein’s heart breaking into a million tiny pieces. According to Hurd, HP was actually more interested in Palm’s IP — specifically webOS, which he wants to put on “tens of millions of HP small form-factor web-connected devices.” Sure, that makes sense, and it lines up perfectly with HP’s plan to ” double down on webOS ” and put it on everything from netbooks and slates to printers , but hey, Mark?




