Showing posts with label Brothers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brothers. Show all posts

Wednesday, 24 July 2013

Review: Brother's HL-3170CDW color laser-class printer is inexpensive, but graphics are mediocre

You want a color laser printer, but you don't have a lot of cash. How does $280 sound? That’s the price of the Brother HL-3170CDW, and in exchange it delivers reasonably good prints. Not pristine, evocative color graphics—move on to another printer for that. But good text and decent spot color, it can do, and the toner costs are tolerable as well.

Here’s the real decision: Do you pick this all-around-average machine, or do you pick this other, like-priced color laser, the Dell C1760nw, which has much better color quality—but also much more expensive toner? Or do you think a bit outside of the box and consider a business inkjet, such as the Epson WorkForce WP-4020, which competes head-to-head with both of these lasers on speed, print quality, and features, and whomps them both on cost of consumables? By our reckoning the latter is the best deal, but some people just can’t get laser out of their heads, and they will have to think harder about the tradeoffs.

Measuring 16.1 inches wide by 18.3 inches deep by 9.4 inches wide and weighing 39 pounds, the HL-3170CDW is fairly large and beefy for an entry-level, laser-class printer (it uses LED technology to produce basically identical results). The height is due more to the stacked toner/drum system than the bottom-mounted, 250-sheet paper cassette. There's also a 100-sheet output tray integrated into the top of the unit, and a single-sheet manual feed for envelopes and glossy photo paper. The unit prints automatically in duplex.

When some color printers run low on one color, they will complain, but keep printing. Not so with the HL-3170CDW: It will not print when you run out of any of the four colors. This can be a problem if you really, really need to print something and haven't any spare toner. Better a warning and a less-than-optimal printout, than no printout at all. Brother needs to rethink this.

There's no reason to make a big deal about control panels on single-function printers, as most people rarely use them after setup is over. (Multifunctions are another story.) But the HL-3170CDW's control panel could definitely use a dedicated menu button. Employing the OK button for this purpose is unintuitive and awkward, an unnecessary corner cut. Otherwise, the single-line monochrome LCD display and controls are easy enough. The HL-3170CDW's setup was a breeze. The unit sports USB, ethernet, and Wi-Fi connectivity. There's a full array of wireless and email printing features, including AirPrint, and both the PC and Mac driver dialogs offer a bevy of options.

After enjoying its initial purchase price, your ongoing costs for the HL-3170CDW will be, if not actually cheap, at least better than expected. Most low-cost color lasers hit you with high toner costs down the road. The HL-3170CDW’s prices hover comfortably around the average—and are better than those of many of its competitors, though not as good as the above-mentioned Epson WorkForce WF-4020, whose inks are amazingly cheap. The unit ships with starter cartridges rated for a scant 1000 pages. Brother’s price for the standard-size, 2500-page black is $85, or a midrange 3.4 cents per page (cpp). We found it online for closer to $70, or 2.8 cpp.

The standard-size, 1400-page cyan, magenta, and yellow supplies cost about $70 apiece per Brother—a middling 5 cents per color, per page. Our shopping found prices closer to $57 apiece, or just over 4 cents per color, per page. A page with all four colors (using the lower prices) would cost about 15 cents. Higher-capacity, 2200-page color cartridges are available, but they offer just a small savings in cost per page over their standard-size cousins.

Speed is good compared to other entry-level color lasers and business inkjets. The Brother HL-3170CDW spits out text and mixed monochrome pages at a lively 12.2 ppm on the PC and 11.2 ppm on the Mac. Snapshot-sized (4-inch by 6-inch) color photos printed onto letter-size paper at a brisk pace of 2.9 ppm, and full-page photos arrive at a spirited 1.4 ppm.

Fast means nothing if quality is inferior, and unfortunately, that describes the HL-3170CDW's graphics. Both monochrome and color artwork exhibited mild horizontal striations and vertical banding that were visible under light scrutiny. Worse, the color palette is overly light, and human faces look jaundiced. For a dab of color, a small picture, or the occasional, simple graphic, the HL-3170CDW's color quality will suffice, but not for much else. On the other hand, text is top-notch, and that's generally the larger part of the equation for the small or home offices that would consider this model.

To its credit, Brother offers a little more than most competitors do. The warranty lasts only one year, but there's free phone support for as long as you own the product. Speed is excellent, and for text and spot color the HL-3170CDW's print quality is fine. Toner costs are around average. At this price point, it offers a decent color-laser experience without gouging you later. But if you want the best possible deal in this price range, a business inkjet delivers far more.

Tuesday, 25 June 2013

BoxTV Acquires Indian VOD Rights of Shaw Brothers' Martial Arts Movies

HONG KONG – Shaw Brothers' martial arts movies will be available in India on digital VOD for the first time, after their rights owners Celestial Pictures concluded a licensing deal with the newly-launched streaming portal BoxTV.

In an announcement Wednesday, the Hong Kong-based Celestial Pictures said BoxTV, which officially launched in February, will be granted multi-year digital VOD rights to more than 100 martial arts movies from its Shaw Brothers library, including films ranging from Chang Cheh’s hard-hitting Blood Brothers to Taylor Wong’s fantasy action film Buddha’s Palm to Return to the 36th Chamber, directed by the late Lau Kar-leung.

“Martial arts content has always been very popular content genre in India. Our association with Celestial Pictures brings to us the Shaw Brothers catalogue, one of the foremost and largest producers of kung-fu/martial arts movies,” said Pandurang Nayak, BoxTV’s business head.

“This is in line with our unique push to get the best of world cinema in a legal and high-quality experience for Internet and mobile users in India,” added Nayak, whose company offers the streaming of movies and television programs on a monthly subscription fee of $3.32 (199 rupees).

Kristen Tong, Celestial Pictures’ head of legal and business affairs, said the distribution deal “affirms the incredible value of our library titles, and also provides our content with great exposure on a new digital platform”. The company has already inked digital VOD agreements in Taiwan, Malaysia and Indonesia.

 

Monday, 24 June 2013

IM Global Taps Former Huayi Brothers Media Corp High Flier to Spearhead Beijing Ambitions

Stuart Ford - P 2012

IM Global, one of the leading foreign sales, financing and production companies, will open Beijing offices in China at the end of June.

The bold expansion plans into Far East, announced by IM Global founder and CEO Stuart Ford, aim to harness the region's international sales activity and oversee the releases of IM Global’s movies in mainland China "as the territory becomes an increasingly important piece of the distribution jigsaw puzzle."

The company has hired well-known local executive Leslie Chen, who was most recently head of international sales at Huayi Brothers Media Corporation, to oversee its ambitions.

Chen played a part in launching sales on major Asian titles such as Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame and Young Detective Dee: Rise of the Sea Dragon by Tsui Hark; Aftershock by Feng Xiao Gang ; If You are the One II by Feng Xiao Gang; Starry Starry Night by Tom Lin; Love by Doze Niu and Tai Chi Hero by Stephen Fung.

IM Global will also base day-to-day management and operations of its Apsara pan-Asian distribution label out of Beijing after Chen’s arrival.

Said Ford: "We’re excited at the prospect of expanding our sales and distribution activities across Asia in the next few years. Leslie is an outstanding hire for us and I look forward to her playing a prominent role in our pan-Asian distribution and sales business in years to come."

Said Chen, “I am very happy to join IM Global and contribute my knowhow and experience of the Asian market to such a dynamic, fast-growing company. It will be an exciting and challenging new journey for both of us."

The move comes less than month after Ford signed a multiyear contract extension as CEO of the company.