Inkjet printers have a hi DPI, like 2400 x 9600, yet the pixels cannot be
individually addressed. I am looking for a way to individually address the
pixels on an inkjet printer. Please give me ideas. Thanks.
"Talal Itani" <titani@verizon.net> wrote in message
news:cBtbk.444$4a3.322@trnddc04...
> Inkjet printers have a hi DPI, like 2400 x 9600, yet the pixels cannot be
> individually addressed. I am looking for a way to individually address
the
> pixels on an inkjet printer. Please give me ideas. Thanks.
Most printers nowadays are preconfigured for MS
Windows. If no Windows software provides the individual
dot control you require, you must programme your own
1. Printer control software
2. Data processing application.
--
Don Phillipson
Carlsbad Springs
(Ottawa, Canada)
Inkjet printers have a hi DPI, like 2400 x 9600, yet the pixels cannot be individually addressed. I am looking for a way to individually address
the
pixels on an inkjet printer. Please give me ideas. Thanks.
Most printers nowadays are preconfigured for MS Windows.
To bad. It would be nice if they had in the box drivers and sotware for all OS including Linux.
If no Windows software provides the individual dot control you require, you must programme your own 1. Printer control software 2. Data processing application.
"Talal Itani" <titani@verizon.net> wrote in message
news:cBtbk.444$4a3.322@trnddc04...
> Hello,
>
> Inkjet printers have a hi DPI, like 2400 x 9600, yet the pixels cannot be
> individually addressed. I am looking for a way to individually address
> the pixels on an inkjet printer. Please give me ideas. Thanks.
>
> T.I.
>
These dots are not externally accessable. They are only accessed by
the printer's ROM in a preprogrammed matrix to print larger dots of
varying intensity, and in patterns for color blending. For instance
2400 x 2400 dots/inch in an 8 x 8 matrix would produce a printed result
of 300 lpi, very adequate for color prints as they blend together.