2006/10/05

HP unveils printing technology for high-end office market

By Erica Ogg, CNET News.com

SAN FRANCISCO--Hewlett-Packard's newest ink-based printing technology, HP Edgeline, will be built into printers geared toward the high-end office market, the company announced Tuesday. The technology was first introduced last spring in in-store retail photo-printing kiosks.

"It's ink-based printing for huge-volume workloads," said Vyomesh Joshi, executive vice president of the HP Imaging and Printing Group, as he introduced the technology at a press conference in downtown San Francisco. The technology is aimed at companies that print hundreds of thousands or even millions of brochures or direct mailings.

HP will begin incorporating the patented technology into some business printers in spring 2007. Edgeline technology refers to HP printers constructed so that the print heads are laid in wide arrays, or side by side, to stretch across a whole page. Instead of the print heads moving and squirting ink onto a page like most inkjet printers, with Edgeline, the paper will move while the print heads remain stationary, and the job can be completed in just one or two passes.

"It's four times faster than anything we've done before," Gary Cutler, vice president of digital printing technologies at HP, said in an interview following the press event. And because the print heads are motionless, that amounts to more accurate ink placement and better image quality, he added.

Joshi said printers with Edgeline technology will also dispense smaller drops of ink at a rate of 1.8 billion per second. Previously, HP's best was in the "low hundreds of millions" of drops per second, according to Cutler.

The design is cheaper to build and more reliable because there are fewer moving parts, Hatem Mostafa, senior vice president of inkjet systems said in an interview.

Between now and 2009, there's about $30 billion worth of business in the retail, industrial and high-volume office printing markets that HP hopes to grab, Cutler said.

Google's Universal Gadgets woos developers

By Tom Espiner, Builder UK

Search giant Google has announced it is opening up its Gadgets framework to Web developers, allowing them to add Universal Gadgets to their pages.

Google Gadgets has been available to end users to add to their Google home pages and desktops since the May release of the Desktop 4 beta. Google announced on Tuesday that users will now be able to use Gadgets in their own Web pages.

Like many other widget frameworks, Google Gadgets use HTML, XML and JavaScript to create mini applications. These applets have typically accessed data from other Google services, such as Calendar or Maps, or from independent applets created by developers. The applications are promoted as an easy way to add dynamic content to Web pages.

Web page creators have been able to create their own Gadgets for some time using the Google Gadgets API, and can use pre-existing Universal Gadgets from Google or third parties--which include date and time, jokes and horoscopes--to add to their own sites.

Google is encouraging developers to share their code with others by publishing them in its Gadgets directory.

"Google encourages gadget authors to share their specifications," states the Google Gadgets API developer guide. One of the advantages to developers is that you "can get your name out there," according to Google blogger Matt Cutts.

"Now anyone can have a great-looking Web site with automatically updating content," said Adam Sah, Google Gadgets architect. "By making Google Gadgets available for you to add to your Web page, we're working to connect developers with enthusiastic consumers and to make information universally accessible and useful to the individual user."

The code for Gadgets is published as XML files on the Web, where Google's servers can access them and process the code. The XML file can contain all of the data and code for the gadget, or have a manifest of components that includes URLs for finding the rest of the elements. Gadgets are used by including some JavaScript in the developer's Web pages, and because they do need to pass through Google's systems, they can't be used offline or independently of the company.

Tom Espiner of Builder UK reported from London.