You need your printer to print, but do you need it to access the Internet? HP and Lexmark are hoping you’ll think so, as they launch more and more of their printers into the cloud. Through ...
Dell has released an Android app that lets users print to network-connected Dell printers, giving the manufacturer a rival to similar cloud-based services from the likes of HP. The company announced ...
Google offered an early look at a project it's undertaking which it hopes will ultimately allow users to print from any Internet-connected device to any printer. The idea basically would eliminate any ...
HP is bringing its first-generation of cloud-ready printers to market. In a recent announcement, the company said Google Cloud Print users can print directly to any HP ePrint-enabled printer from any ...
The Google Cloud Print service promises to make Web-based printing–free of driver requirements and physical connections–a reality for anyone with a Gmail account and Internet access. (HP’s ePrint ...
February 3, 2012 Add as a preferred source on Google Add as a preferred source on Google Google Cloud Print is an under-appreciated service that can send print jobs from virtually anywhere to a ...
The question of how to print from wireless devices has been thrust once again into the limelight recently thanks to the printing-anemic iPad. Longtime notebook and mobile device users are quite ...
(1) Printing from a computer or mobile device to a remote printer via the Internet (the cloud). For example, users can snap photos on a smartphone and send them to a printer at their home or office.
Google’s latest cloud service will make your printer available to any of your Internet-connected devices, regardless of location. Google’s vision of your future home printer is one where you can skip ...
Sometime soon, you’ll likely have something to print—and there’s no guarantee you’ll be at your home or office when the need strikes. You could make a reminder for yourself to print that e-mail or ...
A lot of things have changed in technology over the past decade. Broadband has replaced dial-up. 1GHz now seems slow. Netbooks are now a reality. Tablets are coming back. Change is everywhere, but ...
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