HP DeskJet F4480 Inkjet All-in-One Printer
- Print, Scan and Copy
- Up to 28 ppm black and 22 ppm color
- 29 Second 4×6 photos
- Borderless photos up to panoramma
- Uses HP 60 Series ink cartridges
Product Description
Affordable, compact, and fast, HP’s Deskjet F4480 lets you print, scan, and copy. It produces laser-quality black and vibrant color. Need to cancel a job at the last minute? Just press the Print Cancel button. What’s in the box: DJ F4480 AiO Printer, AC Power cord, HP 60 black ink cartridge (approx. 200 pages), HP 60 tri-color ink cartridge (approx. 150 pages); HP Photosmart Essential Software, Set-up poster and Reference guide.Amazon.com Product Description
Amazon.com Product Description Upgrade, but keep it simple with the efficient HP DeskJet F4480 Inkjet all-in-one printer, scanner, copier for your home. Made from 50 percent recycled plastic, the Energy Star-qualified F4480 makes it easy to go green and helps you save energy, paper, and money by enabling you to printing multiple pages onto onto each side of the paper using the paper-saving Printing option. It can print up to 22 color pages per minute (ppm), offers up to a 1200 x 2400 dpi scan… More >>
HP DeskJet F4480 Inkjet All-in-One Printer
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5 comments
We the People on December 6, 2009 at 3:07 pm
Silly me! I forgot to check to see if this was wireless-enabled. Well, it’s not. I have three computers and now have to use a USB cord to print from the laptop. As for the netbook, which doesn’t have a disk drive, when I tried to download the driver from HP, it said it would take 248 minutes (on cable). Even loading the CD on the PC took well over an hour. Old, clunky and noisy technology. Spend a little more for a better printer.
C. Rosencrantz on December 6, 2009 at 3:33 pm
HP sucks. That’s all there is to it. I don’t care that the software is crummy, or the “intuitive” interface is so intuitive it can’t be understood by anyone smarter than Forrest Gump. The printer bricks cartridges–”previously used cartridge installed”–at random. I’ve spent enough money on cartridges–refilling bricks them, removing and replacing bricks them, switching the printer from one computer to another bricks them, running out of colored ink bricks the black ink cartridge–that I should have bought a 5″ linux tablet and used it as a PDF reader. Or just gone to Kinko’s, where no one hovers over my shoulder telling me I need to buy a paper tray refill license BECAUSE I ALREADY PAID FOR IT. Look, jerks, this isn’t “licensed”, it’s hardware.
Crystal Hopper on December 6, 2009 at 3:38 pm
I just received my new all-in-one HP printer. I was excited. But, I can’t use it just yet. I have to purchase a USB cord seperately? Man, I wish I would have known that…what, did I have to read fine print to find that out? My other printers came with their own cords. So, needless to say I have not been able to use it just yet. Set up was pretty simple though. Installation was just as easy. I just hope this thing actually works once I get the cord.
Sheila Michaels on December 6, 2009 at 4:36 pm
Printers now have features no one would have dreamed of even a few years ago, & they’re cheap enough to be disposable. Which they are. At least, with Amazon, there’s no postage cost for the continual flow of printers to my house. Printers are kept cheap so the companies can sell expensive ink cartridges. Then, after about a year, something irreparable goes wrong with the cartridge holder. Every time. I had two HP printers in the house: one wouldn’t accept the color cartridge, the other simply broke & wouldn’t take either cartridge. Repair would have been too expensive: so I had to buy another printer, which left me with a small fortune in cartridges which were now unusable. There have been no paper jams on this printer yet. The instructions for the scanner are about useless for the printer’s owner, & the FAQ on the HP Printers site is no help. It scans, but there is no easy access to the image. The quality of the printing seems to have declined & it’s slower than the last printer. Color quality is not high.
While it lasts, it will do.
MrRenfield on December 6, 2009 at 6:00 pm
The printer itself is fine, but I only have about 20% of my black ink cartridge left and I’ve only printed ~30 pages, 20 of which were 600dpi grayscale. Admittedly that will suck up ink faster, but how can it suck up *that* much ink? There’s no way this would have ever made it to 200 regular pages on the included cartridge.
The other problem is that the ink is smudging like crazy on the regular low-rez pages, even 24 hours after printing. The paper I’m using worked just fine with my previous printer (a Canon Pixma), so I can’t imagine it’s the paper’s fault.
I’m hoping it’s just bad ink. I’m buying replacement cartridges and trying again before returning it.