Digital Printing-Production Inkjet - Continuous Feed (Color)
We asked in-plants which new products and services would be fueling their growth over the next few years. The responses were surprising.
With two new inkjet presses, the State of Michigan’s Print and Mail Management division has big plans for bringing low-cost color to state agencies.
A modular, single-pass print solution, DuraFlex combines Memjet's signature features of speed, simplicity, and affordability, with an added durability, A4 and A3 widths in a four-color printhead, and high-speed data paths. This technology is a low-risk way for print customers to move to inkjet or add new solutions.
The State of Tennessee’s Document Solutions division recently joined other state printing operations across the country by installing a production inkjet press.
What had been a smaller, focused event for Ricoh's continuous-feed inkjet press user base, INTERACT 2019 marked the second year that the user conference was expanded to include Ricoh cut-sheet digital toner, wide-format printing, and software customers.
Back in 2014 when the State of Colorado's in-plant installed one of the first inkjet presses, the technology was not yet as proven as it is today. What convinced State Printer Mike Lincoln that inkjet was the right direction for his operation to go?
What is becoming clearer is that the old ways of doing business are becoming less and less tenable.
For in-plants, solid outcomes often require hard decisions about staffing, technology and services offered. This university print center made them — and prospered by sticking to them.
Much has changed since the first Inkjet Summit in 2013. Inkjet technology has not only proven itself, it’s becoming more mainstream, so the opportunity to use inkjet to get ahead of the competition is fading fast.
After a relatively calm start to the year, April took off with a bang when two of the busiest events — the Inkjet Summit and the Association of College and University Printers conference — took place in the same week, forcing me to race from one to the other. It was not easy.