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"The Micropress sits on the network and looks to the printer through the software we built," explains Jim Cavedo, manager of marketing communications for T/R Systems. "It looks at your network [of printers] like one printer, so on a single Micropress you can have multiple engines."
For companies that don't often need to use several printers for the same job, clusters can be broken up throughout the building and on different floors. If paper jams or toner runs out, the job is automatically forwarded to another printer in the system.
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- Companies:
- Agfa Graphics
- Hewlett-Packard
- Xerox Corp.
- People:
- Barbera
- Stan Bradshaw
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