Laser Power
![]() |
![]() 60W CO2 Laser Tube Power Supply Engraver Engraving US $585.00
|
![]() 50W CO2 Laser Tube Power Supply Engraver Cutting US $530.00
|
![]() 40W CO2 Laser Tube Power Supply Engraver 80cm US $320.00
|
The Brother HL 1230 Printer Toner Cartridge- Designed For Home Use
The Brother HL 1230 printer brings laser technology to the home and was designed specifically for home use. This printer can connect to any computer running Windows 95 or high operating system. Customers have also been able to connect it to Linux operating systems. This printer produces high quality printouts using black and white laser technology. It has a re solution of 600 x 600 dpi and can produce up to 12 pages per minute.
The HL 1230 can print on legal and A4 size paper as well as labels, bonds, transparencies and card stock. It is a monochromatic printer with a paper tray that holds up to 250 sheets. The printer has 2MB of RAM and is about 14.5 inches in width. It is a great compact model that can fit unobtrusively into the smallest of spaces.
HL-1230 is easy to install, software is provided that gives step-by-step instructions and other guides on how to use the printer. You can also directly hook up to the Brothers website for additional features and technical help. The printer goes into power save mode after 90 seconds and very quickly recovers when you wish to print. It has a parallel port to hook up to the network, which is not as good as a USB connection.
For those that do a lot of black and white printer it is an excellent choice as the HL 1230 Toner last quite a long time, up to 10 months with daily use. Brother products tend to use the latest technology. This product may be slightly behind other laser printers but it is perfect for home use and is very affordable. The user manual provides directions to print on different media including using the manual feed slot.
The HL 1230 printer can use any of the following cords to connect to your computer, Belkin serial printer cable, Belkin 17ft Ethernet patch cable, Belkin 15' IEEE 1284 bi-directional parallel cable, Belkin 10' Parallel cable, and Belkin 6' IEEE 1284 Bi-directional parallel cable. You can also print on any of the following types of paper, glossy photo paper, photo matte paper, multipurpose paper, and more.
The Brothers website has all the drivers needed to run the HL 1230 printer. You just need to have an operating system of Windows 95 or greater. Customers have also had success hooking up to computers that use a Linux system.
Customers have had a few issues with the printer as they do not know how to reset the printer, do not know how to determine what is wrong when the alarm light is on and don't realize that drivers need to be updated when you update your computers operating system. All of these problems can be fixed and information is available at the Brothers website.
Despite these small problems the Brothers HL 1230 Printer is a great printer for personal use as it provides excellent quality HL 1230 Printer Toner Cartridge at high speed. Usage and set up are easy and you can print onto many different kinds of media. The Brother HL 1230 Toner should last about 3,000 pages and it is recommended to have a spare on hand in case you run out a bit before 3,000.
I need a super power for a fictional character?
I'm writing a western story about a bounty hunter in the old west, kind of a Jonah Hex thing, but I do not wanna give him Jonah's power of reviving the dead, or anything like that. I've wracked my brain but I can't think of an interesting power to give him. Here's what I don't want him to have:
No Laser power
No Powers of ghostly kind (like see them or raise them)
No manipulating the elements
No transportation powers (like super speed, flight or teleportation) just cause that would make the journeys to fast.
help me out please, I am lost.
the power of observation... it may sound lame but if used properly, it may be cool too.. like he can track almost anything because of that. he can avoid bullets fired at him because of how the barrel and the shooter acts, he can beat almost anybody on a fist fight, but not before taking in many blows as he observe how his opponent/s move...
Research update: Sharpening the lines (MIT)
The microchip revolution has seen a steady shrinking of features on silicon
chips, packing in more transistors and wires to boost chips’ speed and data
capacity. But in recent years, the technologies behind these chips have begun
to bump up against fundamental limits, such as the wavelengths of light used
for critical steps in chip manufacturing.
Now, a new technique developed by researchers at MIT and the University of
Utah offers a way to break through one of these limits, possibly enabling
further leaps in the computational power packed into a tiny sliver of silicon.
A paper describing the process was published in the journal _Physical Review
Letters_ in November.
Postdoc Trisha Andrew PhD ’10 of MIT’s Research Laboratory of Electronics, a
co-author of this paper as well as a 2009 paper that described a way of
creating finer lines on chips, says this work builds on that earlier method.
But unlike the earlier technique, called absorbance modulation, this one
allows the production of complex shapes rather than just lines, and can be
carried out using less expensive light sources and conventional chip-
manufacturing equipment. “The whole optical setup is on a par with what’s out
there” ...
Beaming up laser power
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.


US $585.00





Comments are closed.