Sooo... If I live in a very wet and hot weather in half of the year, and a very dry and somewhat cold weather in the other half, like São Carlos, Brasil, there is no printer for me? ;-)
Inkjets are cheap to buy here, but original replacement cartridges are very expensive. Third parties cartrigdes (refurbished or not), on the other side, are very cheap, but causes problems (at least the HP ones; Epson dont see to cause problems). And the quality of inkjets are not good compared to laser printers. Is there a range in laser toner's price? And dot matrix printers... ah, good old days... Like I said, speed is not a issue, at least if the dot matrix printer dont shake the house! ;-) Thank you for all the answers. On Jul 11, 12:50 am, Roberto C. Sánchez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Tue, Jul 10, 2007 at 11:36:43PM -0400, Douglas Allan Tutty wrote: > > On Tue, Jul 10, 2007 at 10:15:49PM -0500, Ron Johnson wrote: > > > > >Oddly enough, this moisture problem has even cause people to develop > > > >specific units whose only purpose is to remove moisture from the air. > > > >They are called dehumidifiers. > > > > Why remove the humidity and leave the heat? Doesn't sound very bright. > > > Isn't it the Texans that love 40C weather and say "Oh, but its a _dry_ > > heat"? > > 1. Ron is from Louisiana > 2. It *is* a dry heat (except maybe in the east part of the state) > > Regards, > > -Roberto > > -- > Roberto C. Sánchezhttp://people.connexer.com/~robertohttp://www.connexer.com > > signature.asc > 1KDownload