Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Brother MFC-9130CW


The Brother MFC-9130CW is the junior of three LED-based multifunction printers (MFPs) that the company recently introduced , offering a sparser feature set than the Brother MFC-9330CDW or Brother MFC-9340CDW at a slightly lower price. If duplex (two-sided) printing, copying, scanning, or faxing?or printing directly from a USB key?isn't important to your small or home office, it can save you some money over the other two MFPs.

The MFC-9130CW can print, copy, scan, and fax. It lets you fax either from your computer (PC Fax), or as a standalone unit without needing a computer. a USB thumb drive. It includes a 35-page automatic document feeder (ADF) for unattended copying, scanning, or faxing of multi-page documents of up to legal size. Unlike the MFC-9340CDW, it doesn't support duplex scanning, copying, or faxing; although you can still scan two-sided documents, you'd have to feed it side by side, a page at a time.

The Brother MFC-9130CW is two-toned (off-white and gray) MFP is boxy except for a swept-back front panel, which includes a 3.7-inch color touch screen. The backlit numerical keypad to the right of the touch screen only appears when you press Fax or other functions that require data entry. The only physical button visible is the Start/Stop button.

The MFC-9130CW uses LEDs in place of lasers as a light source. LED printers are generally smaller than the equivalent laser printers, and this model is no exception: It's reasonably compact at 16.1 by 16.1 by 19 inches (HWD) and weighing 49.6 pounds.

Paper capacity is 250 sheets, plus a one-page manual feed slot. Unlike the Brother MFC-9330CDW and Brother MFC-9340CDW, it lacks an automatic duplexer for printing on both sides of a sheet of paper. The driver provides on-screen guidance for manual duplexing.

The MFC-9130CW connects to a PC via a USB cable, or to a network via Ethernet or WiFi. It supports Wi-Fi direct, which allows for direct printing between compatible devices without the need to go through a WiFi network. It's compatible with Apple AirPrint, Brother iPrint&Scan, Google Cloud Print, and Cortado WorkPlace for printing from mobile devices. I tested it over an Ethernet connection, with the drivers installed on a computer running Windows Vista.

HP LaserJet Pro 500 Color MFP M570dn

Printing Speed
I timed the Brother MFC-9130CW, rated at 19 pages per minute for both color and monochrome printing, on our business applications suite (as timed with QualityLogic's hardware and software) at 6.5 effective pages per minute (ppm), a decent speed for its price and rated speed. It was a little faster even than the Brother MFC-9340CDW, rated at 23 ppm, which tested at 5.8 ppm, and just slower than the Brother MFC-9330CDW, rated at 23 ppm, which I timed at 6.8 ppm. The Editors' Choice Dell 2155cn , rated at 24 ppm for both color and monochrome, was a touch slower, at an effective 5.9 ppm. The Ricoh Aficio SP C240SF, though rated at only 16 pages per minute for both color and mono, nearly matched the MFC-9130CW, at an effective 6.3 ppm.

Output Quality
Overall output quality for the MFC-9130CW was a touch below par. Text quality was right on par for laser-class printer, which is to say very good. It's fine for any business use short of ones that require very small fonts, such as demanding desktop publishing applications.

Graphics quality was par for a color laser. Colors were generally well saturated; some dark backgrounds looked a bit blotchy. There was mild banding (a regular pattern of faint striations) in many of the illustrations. It did not do well in showing a gradient between darker and lighter tones, as the printed output showed little difference between them. Graphics are fine for in-house business use, including PowerPoint handouts, though I'd be hesitant to pass them to clients I was seeking to impress.

Photo quality was below par for a laser. Prints were on the light side, with some colors muted. A monochrome photo showed a slight tint. Several prints showed mild banding. Posterization (an abrupt shift in color where it should be gradual) was evident in one photo that tends to bring it out. Quality is fine for printing out images from Web pages or files, but that's about all.

The MFC-9130CW costs a bit less than the two other MFPs that Brother released at the same time, the MFC-9330CDW and MFC-9340CDW, and it has a more modest feature set. In particular, it lacks the ability to automatically print, scan, copy, or fax two-sided documents, and eschews a port for a USB thumb drive. Its output quality, though comparable to its two "brothers", falls short of that of the Editors' Choice Dell 2155cn.

In short, the Brother MFC-9130CW has decent speed for a small-office, laser-class MFP. Its relatively low price comes at the expense of some features like duplexing. Its text quality is fine for nearly any business use. Graphics and photo quality, though fine for most in-house use, are short of what we look for in a printer suitable for outputting basic marketing materials and the like. It's a good, cost-effective MFP for an office with an occasional need for color printing, provided that high-quality color output isn't paramount.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/nMzcn6rmWkE/0,2817,2420903,00.asp

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Tuesday, June 11, 2013

'Monsters University' Review: Wait, Didn't We See All This in 'The Internship'?

By Alonso Duralde

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Two charming, flawed protagonists at the end of their rope must rally together a team of misfits and win a big intramural competition to keep their career hopes alive. If you identified that as the plot of "The Internship," that would be correct, but it's also a synopsis of "Monsters University," Disney/Pixar's prequel to 2001's lightweight but successful "Monsters, Inc."

What "Monsters University" has in its favor is that most of its under-12 audience members won't recognize the plot elements from "Revenge of the Nerds" or countless other slobs-beat-the-snobs comedies. ("University" also offers a much more visually pleasing color palette, as opposed to the Google-inspired Roy G. Biv optical assault of "The Internship.")

For all the familiarity of the plot, screenwriters Robert L. Baird, Daniel Gerson and Dan Scanlon (the latter also directed) do at least throw in some unexpected detours on their journey from Point A to Point B - and since it's a prequel, that's the least they could do.

But among Pixar movies based on previous Pixar movies, it never reaches the heights of the "Toy Story" sequels while managing to avoid the craven just-here-to-sell-toys-ness of "Cars 2."

Young Mike Wazowski (voiced by Billy Crystal) is the smallest kid in his grade-school class, but after a field trip to Monsters, Inc., he dreams of one day becoming a "scarer," those feared and respected monsters who frighten young children at night to capture their screams as the fuel that powers the monster world.

He eventually gets one step closer to his goal by attending the prestigious Monsters University (which shares the "M" logo with Monsters, Inc., although it's never explained if this is merely a feeder school or an independent entity).

Mike spends long hours in the library learning everything he possibly can about scaring, but it all seems to come naturally to his rival, James P. Sullivan (John Goodman), whose father has already distinguished himself in the field. The rivalry between the ambitious but not naturally gifted Mike and coasting slacker Sully builds to a head during their first final exam, and the damage they cause leads the stentorian Dean Hardscrabble (Helen Mirren) to kick them out of the Scare Program.

The expulsion plunges Mike into despair, and gets Sully kicked out of his alpha-male fraternity, but the two figure out a way to get back in: the campus-wide Scare Games, in which fraternities and sororities compete to see who can be the most adept at child-frightening. Sully gets the dean to agree to let them resume their studies if they can win, and it's a tricky task, since the only frat that will have them is the milquetoast Oozma Kappa.

To no one's surprise, lessons are learned about teamwork, and Mike and Sully become the friends that we know them to be in "Monsters, Inc." Where "Monsters University" subverts the usual kid-movie moral is by suggesting that sometimes you don't get to follow your dream, no matter how hard you work at it, but maybe something you're actually great at will surface instead.

And in a message that parents might not embrace, even in these tough economic times, the film also implies that work experience might trump higher education.

For me, "Monsters University" was sweet and entertaining and almost immediately forgettable, lacking the character intricacies and wit and poignancy offered by the "Toy Story" movies and "Up" and "The Incredibles" and the first half of "WALL-E." But that's how I felt about "Monsters, Inc." as well, so if the original movie is one you hold near and dear, you'll no doubt cherish an opportunity to get to know these characters better.

Crystal and Goodman reprise their comfortable rapport as opposites who come to fill in each other's empty spaces, and Steve Buscemi is back to show us how chameleon Randy got so spiteful. Mirren and Alfred Molina make for imposing and compelling faculty members, and the cast is rounded out with a lineup of comic all-stars that includes Joel Murray, Sean Hayes, Dave Foley, Charlie Day, Nathan Fillion, Bobby Moynihan, Bonnie Hunt, Aubrey Plaza and Pixar regular John Ratzenberger.

(Attached to the film is a sweet short called "The Blue Umbrella," featuring a lovely score by Jon Brion. The story of a blue male bumbershoot who falls in love with a red female one, it's likely to pop up both in the Oscars' animated shorts category and in future gender-studies term papers on how boy-meets-girl is engrained in children's entertainment from the get-go.)

Falling as it does squarely between the studio's classics and its decidedly lesser work, "Monsters University" is a solidly average Pixar effort, one that brings some laughs to the kegger, but you'll be hard-pressed to remember it at the reunion in 10 years.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/monsters-university-review-wait-didnt-see-internship-205018650.html

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