Reviewed on May 26, 2009The Canon Pixma MX330 doesn't produce the best quality prints, but you won't find a more versatile printer in the sub-$150 category. An auto-document feeder, 1.8-inch LCD screen, and easy-to-use features make it an excellent choice for creative homes on a budget.TAGS:Canon Pixma, Canon Inc., tray, printer, fax, document, media, LCD, printing, button, setting, photograph
Reviewed on August 23, 2007If you don't mind the shorter display life of dye-based prints or the paper choices offered by Canon, the Pixma Pro9000 makes an excellent choice for a medium-format inkjet printer.TAGS:Canon Pixma, Canon Inc., ink, paper, printer, Epson, printing, path, photograph, camera
Reviewed on November 6, 2008The Epson Artisan 800 produces impressive color prints, photos, and text documents, and it outpaces the competition in almost all of our speed tests. We're impressed by its performance, but hesitate to recommend this printer based on the poor build quality and error-prone software.TAGS:tray, Epson, fax machine, Canon Pixma, printer, photocopier, paper, fax, HP Photosmart, printing, LCD, scanner, Canon Inc., photograph, CD, HP
Reviewed on September 18, 2006Photographers will love the Canon Pixma iP6700D's speedy, high-quality photos, but sluggish, mediocre text output will be a turn-off for the SOHO/business crowd.TAGS:Canon Pixma, printing, Canon Inc., printer, IrDA, laser printer, photograph, laser
Reviewed on May 14, 2007The Canon Pixma iP90v is the Vista-enabled version of the older Pixma iP90 and offers nearly the same print speeds and quality. It's a very useful printer if you travel a lot and need to print often, but consider the purchase carefully because it's quite expensive.TAGS:Canon Pixma, printing, PictBridge, Canon Inc., photograph, printer, Bluetooth, battery, laptop computer, HP