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- Canon PIXMA MX7600 Office All-in-One Printer
- Epson WorkForce 500 All-in-One Printer (Black) (C1...
- Canon PIXMA MP760 All-in-One Photo Printer
- Epson Perfection 1650 Photo Flatbed Scanner
- Digital Sender 9250c 600 dpi x 600 dpi Document Sc...
- VuPoint PS-C500-VP Photo Digital Converter
- Epson Stylus Photo RX600 Inkjet All-in-One
- HP Scanjet 4850 Photo Scanner (L1950A#B1H)
- Logitech Mouse M110 (White)
- Epson Perfection 1200U USB Flatbed Scanner
- Epson Perfection 2480 Photo Flatbed Scanner
- Canon® CanoScan 8800F Flatbed Color Scanner
- Canon CanoScan LiDE 700F - Flatbed scanner - 8.5 i...
- HP ScanJet 4070 PhotoSmart Scanner
- Canon CanoScan 4200F Flatbed Scanner
- Epson Stylus Photo RX620 All-in-One
- Canon MP980 Wireless All-in-One Photo Printer
- Canon PIXMA MP800 All In One Photo Printer
- Hammacher Schlemmer Photograph Converter
- HP ScanJet 7650 Flatbed Scanner with Auto Document...
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November
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Canon PIXMA MP760 All-in-One Photo Printer
The Canon PIXMA MP760 Photo All-In-One is an amazingly versatile home-office performer. Its built-in 2.5" LCD display lets you fine-tune your images for the best results1. You can print and copy up to 25 ppm in black and up to 17 ppm in color2 and print a beautiful 4"x 6" borderless photo in about 36 seconds.2 The built-in film adapter conveniently lets you scan 35mm slides and negatives for printing or archiving. You can also prin...
Brand: Canon Model: 9792A002 Dimensions: 27.34 pounds Print text and photos, copy, and scan in one convenient unit 4,800 x 1,200 optimized dpi color, 600 x 600 dpi black resolution Up to 17 ppm color, 25 ppm black, 4-by-6-inch photo in about 36 seconds Large 2.5-inch LCD for easy viewing, editing, and printing USB, Direct Printer Port, camera card slots; PC/Mac compatible
Most helpful customer reviews 309 of 312 people found the following review helpful. Which Canon Multifunction is right for you? By diljs First off, if you're in the market for a printer, you can't go wrong with a Canon. Canon printers consistently beat out the competition in independent tests for print quality. Their items are elegant, well designed, and most importantly, ink is affordable. We all know the razor and blade scheme: sell the printer below cost and make it up with pricey cartridges. Canon, however, saves you a lot of money by including the print head with the printer and not on each cartridge. Because of this, genuine Canon cartridges can be had for around $12, while 3rd party cartridges, which many claim work just as well, can be found for as low as $2. If you've already decided on a Canon multifunction, lets see which model is right for you. Canon's current market list is as follows: MP130 - New model, and the most affordable yet. Copy/Print/Scan 18ppm black, 13ppm color 2 ink tanks No auto sheet feeder! Card slots MP390 - Has a fax, About half the cost of the MP7xx's. Copy/Print/SCan/Fax 18ppm black, 12 ppm color 2 ink tanks card slots MP750 - Older model - exactly the same as mp780 but no fax. Copy/Print/Scan 25ppm black, 17 ppm color 5 ink tanks Built in Duplexing MP760 - New Model - geared towards photo enthusiasts. Copy/Print/Scan + Special Photo Features 25ppm black, 17 ppm color 5 ink tanks No auto sheet feeder! Built in Duplexing *Unique photo features: 2.5 inch lcd screen Built in film adapter for 35mm slides or negatives can print directly from negatives Card slots MP780 - Does it all except for the mp760 photo features. Copy/Print/Scan/Fax 25ppm black, 17 ppm color 5 ink tanks Built in Duplexing Now, let's look more closely at some key differences between these models: *Fax: The first thing you should do is decide if you need a fax or not. If you do, you should choose between the MP780 or the MP390. If not, don't rule those two out just yet, they may have have other features you can't live without. *Note: There is NO auto fax/telephone switching on these models if you wish to use the same line for faxes and voice calls. *Number of ink tanks: The next important thing you should look at is whether you want to be able to replace each color individually or not. The MP750, MP760 and MP780 all have 5 individual ink tanks (photo black, black, cyan, yellow, magenta), while the MP130 and MP390 have only 2 (black and tricolor). The cost of each cartridge is about the same, but you will waste some leftover ink by throwing out the MP130 or MP390's color cartridge when just one color runs out. *Photo printing: If you're planning on printing a lot of photos, you should probably go with an mp7xx. These have a superior print head, as well as the 5 separate ink tanks. The MP760 is especially noteable with all the features Canon has added specifically for photos. These come at a price however, as the MP760 does not share the auto sheet feeder of its MP750 and MP780 cousins, or the fax of the 780. *However - If you plan on printing directly from memory cards, beware! The mp750 and mp780 do not have card slots! The 2 cheaper models and the mp760 do. *Auto sheet feeder: The mp130 and mp760 do NOT have an auto sheet feeder. All 3 of the others do. An auto sheet feeder is very useful when doing a lot of scanning or faxing. *Duplexing: The mp7xx models each have built in duplexing. *Size: The mp7xx models weigh around 30 pounds and are quite big. The MP390 is a smaller, and weighs 18 pounds. The mp130 has a tiny footprint for a multifunction printer, and weighs 14 pounds. Some features that all of Canon's current MFPs share: *Copying: Each of these models has a copy function, and all have the same resolution (600x600 black, 1200x1200 color). *USB 2.0 connection *Pictbridge direct photo printing support *All 5 models are great looking and will complement almost any decor. My recommendations: If you want a great price on an
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