Canon MP980 Wireless All-in-One Photo Printer
- Six individual ink system featuring gray ink provides profesional color and monochrome photos
- ChromaLife100 system delivers vibrant photos that last up to 300 years
- Maximum 9600 x 2400 dpi with microscopic droplets as small as 1 picoliter using FINE technology
- 4800 dpi high resolution CCD scanner for documents and films
- WHITE LED eliminates warm-up time for document scanning
Product Description
Canon MP980 all-in-one photo printer is ultimate wireless printer with 3.5-inch LCD.Manufacturer Product Description
Get ready for premium performance and fabulous results. The new ChromaLife100+ 6-color ink system includes a unique grey ink, which helps you achieve the exceptional monochrome and color values sought by discerning photographers. And it’s blazing fast: You can create long-lasting 4 x 6 inch photos with spectacular 9600 x 2400 color dpi resolution in about 20 seconds. The high-resolution CCD scanner will yield spectacular 4800 x 9600 color dpi results, and copies will be more faithful to your originals. .caption { font-family: Verdana, Helvetica neue, Arial, serif; font-size: 10px; font-weight: bold; font-style: italic; } ul.indent { list-style: inside disc; text-indent: 20px; } table.callout { font-family: Verdana, Helvetica, Arial, serif; margin: 10px; width: 250; } td.callout { height: 100 percent; background: #9DC4D8 url(http… More >>
Canon MP980 Wireless All-in-One Photo Printer
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5 comments
B. Campbell on December 23, 2009 at 7:42 am
Purchased this item early Dec. 2008. Tried to duplicate some photos, tried all the options… the machine just could not accurately duplicate the color and saturation qualities of the photos I had. Really disappointed. Returned it.
Bob
Kazantzakis on December 23, 2009 at 10:18 am
See my review for the MP970. Looks like the whole MP series have problems.
Philipp Rothmaler on December 23, 2009 at 11:36 am
`No Mac airport device is supported by MP 980,’ I was told by the Canon Tech Support after my failed attempts to set it up with my Airport Extreme Network. I followed all steps up to the one where the printer is supposed to automatically recognize the network. It failed to do so repeatedly, even when using (as other reviewers have suggested) a USB cable. I returned the printer.
Even at the Apple store at 59th St in NYC, where they are selling the same printer next to Airport Extreme, one could not see them running, and the sales person was not sure about the details of set-up (though he also suggested that a USB connection may initially be needed, which is not mentioned in the Canon manual).
It seems Canon couldn’t care less about Mac users, while Apple didn’t give any evidence that the two could work together.
Larry Barber on December 23, 2009 at 11:37 am
I just received this product as a gift from one of my Windows-centric relatives, and have discovered that Canon has decided to only support Windows and Apple computers and won’t even release product specs so that open source programmers can write the drivers that this product needs to operate with Linux. Until they do one or the other this is just an expensive paperweight to me.
Karen Sue on December 23, 2009 at 12:25 pm
I researched for three days to choose the very best printer in this price range. I have more than a thousand pictures from 1933 forward to archive. I read reviews from several sources raving about the exactness of scanning and copying photos to the original. NOT!! I sent it back because the quality of scanning to print was HORRIBLE. I was so shocked that I called tech support. After getting off the phone to confer with a “higher-up” I was told I have to use my computer photo software to fix the discrepencies. I asked if he realized how much expensive paper that would be to work on a picture, print it to see if I was close enough to the original to be acceptable then do it again how many times per each picture for 1,000 pics? I don’t think so!