
On line Inkjet Printers HP Photosmart D110A Wireless Printer (CN731A#B1H)
List Price :
Get Your Best Price at : $199.00

Product Details
- Color: Black
- Brand: HP
- Model: CN731A#B1H
- Format: CD-ROM
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 7.09" h x 17.40" w x 15.85" l, 13.35 pounds
- CPU: Intel Pentium 4 2.1 GHz
- Memory: 4GB SDRAM
- Hard Disk: 320GB
- Processors: 1
- Display size: 2.36
Features
- Now AirPrint compatible. Simply print from iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch.
- Print, copy, scan with a 2.36-Inch LCD (with TouchSmart frame)
- Quickly print from the Web without using a PC
- Print anywhere, anytime, with any device
- Save energy and conserve resources (Energy Star qualified)
Descriptions of Inkjet Printers HP Photosmart D110A Wireless Printer (CN731A#B1H)
Product Description
Count on the HP Photosmart e-All-in-one for everything you print, including photos, documents and Web content. Make your own photo books, calendars, collages and greeting cards using HP Photo Creations software. Use the HP TouchSmart Frame to print Web content like coupons, recipes and more without using a PC. Plus, print wirelessly from any room in your home and share your photo printer with multiple people. Simply touch one button for easy wireless setup. Print from anywhere, anytime to the HP Photosmart e-All-in-One. Send emails, photos and everyday documents from a smartphone, notebook PC or other mobile device directly to your photo printer. Save power with this ENERGY STAR qualified product, plus save paper by printing multiple pages on a single sheet. Edit and print lab-quality photos without a PC using the memory card slots and 2.36-Inch LCD with TouchSmart Frame. With this HP photo printer, original HP inks and HP Advanced Photo Paper, your prints will last for generations.
HP Photosmart D110A Wireless Printer (CN731A#B1H) is my favorite everything published this workweek. By encouraging its unequaled design , varied and here fit at most for your own use . Now there are a wide variety of products you're able get. The whole product or service is constructed through special materials that have first class or style . HP Photosmart D110A Wireless Printer (CN731A#B1H) is a pet pick some people . And WE strongly recommend it. With the international great standards , thus bringing in this product a swish or as expected long lived. While many folks love currently the HP Photosmart D110A Wireless Printer (CN731A#B1H) as a multitude of versions of colors , types , materials .
All of this is while most suggested regarding HP Photosmart D110A Wireless Printer (CN731A#B1H).
- HP Photosmart D110A Wireless Printer (CN731A#B1H) is masterful and a high quality products.
- If The individual concerned as a way for pick up a bit of a HP Photosmart D110A Wireless Printer (CN731A#B1H) to a go out with discount rates , The customer could also pattern to discover over summit approximately product or service items , spec or even description .
- Read the reassessment just in case grant the purchaser to apprize of the HP Photosmart D110A Wireless Printer (CN731A#B1H) disadvantages and pros .
- You was able to make an attempt to get likewise hooey and here and there this substance helps oneself in selecting lease .
- You could possibly try out to observe and ascertain articles or blog posts .
- Get subject matter of livery item, reason all stuff is diverging clause and they condition.

Inkjet Printers HP Photosmart D110A Wireless Printer (CN731A#B1H) Customer Reviews
Customer Reviews
Most helpful customer reviews
350 of 361 people found the following review helpful.
Some intriguing new features, but not everything you'd want; quality is fine for ordinary use but not professional
By Nathan Andersen
This is a decent low-end printer with a few very cool features, and satisfactory but not stellar performance. It would be the ideal printer for a small family, especially with children who like to print things (and what kids don't like to print things). I'm going to quickly go through the features and mention what I've experienced after playing with it for a few days; where relevant, I'll compare its features to my slightly more expensive Canon printer.
SETUP:
The printer's nicely packed, and easy to put together. The only trick I had was installing the printer cartridges. Like another reviewer said, the printer cartridges don't go in exactly the way the diagram or the illustrated video on the printer's screen suggests. If you make a mistake, it will say that they're not installed, and then you can't just go fix the mistake because it doesn't recognize you've fixed it unless you power off and power on again. One other thing I like is that the whole thing comes with a handy canvas carrying tote. That'll be nice because I may occasionally bring it home.
WIRELESS:
Setting up this printer as a wireless printer was extremely easy. I've setup about 5 different wireless printers over the past year and this was by far the easiest. What made it simple was that the instructions on the printer's screen show you exactly how to connect it to a local wireless point, and then when you install the software on the screen it automatically recognizes the printer as there to be used. Easy stuff.
PHOTOS:
It's advertised as a photo printer, and it does okay with photos but not great. I printed an 8.5 x 11 glossy of my family on quality photo paper and from far away it looks fine, but if you get close you'll see evidence of print lines. It's especially evident on skin, where you can see the little lines that make it almost look like your subjects had been sleeping on corduroy pants and had little fading line indentations left behind.
PRINTING:
For other kinds of print jobs, where fine details are less important, the printer does a good job and things look nice. It's pretty slow, though. It's not nearly fast enough for most professional office use, so the speed alone pretty much qualifies this as a home use printer. My Canon PIXMA MX860, for example, is quite a bit faster, and prints better photos. Of course, that one is bulkier than this one, and costs a bit more.
SCANNING:
The Photosmart scans just fine, though if you want any kind of control you have to scan from the software that installs on your computer with the driver. I tried scanning a page of text to send to my computer using just the controls on the printer and it ended up scanning only half of the page, and inverting the layout from the way it was actually placed on the scan bed. You can only scan one page at a time - there's no feeding.
Additionally, it only scans things as images, that it can send either as .jpg or .pdf files. That means you can't produce an editable text document from a scan unless you have additional software that can convert the images into such. My Canon Pixma MX860 does give me the option to create .txt files.
COPY:
Works fine, exactly as you'd expect.
FAX:
Doesn't exist. This is not a fax machine, so the "All-in-One" might be a bit of a misnomer - then again, who uses fax machines anymore? I have fax capability on all my other printers and I've never had the need to use it. When I absolutely need to fax, I use my office's dedicated machine. One more reason, though, that this wouldn't work as an all-in-one office printer even for a small office, since sometimes business use requires faxing.
WEB:
There are two web features this comes with. One, apparently, doesn't work yet (as of June 30, 2010) but is (allegedly) coming soon. That's the "ePrint" function, that allows a registered user to print to this printer from anywhere on the web, even if they aren't anywhere close to the printer. I'd love to be able to print out stuff I'll need the next day from home, so it'll be ready for me when I arrive at my office, so this is a feature I'm looking forward to.
The other feature is what's called "Print Apps" - basically, you register for print apps online at HPs site (several will be already set up for you if you accept the Web features during setup ... in fact, right now as far as I can tell every one of the available apps is already set up for you, though it looks like they are planning to have a lot more apps.) Anyhow, the webapps allow you to print directly from the web. I kind of like the Sudoku app, that allows me to print Sudoku puzzles directly from the printer. There's also a Coupon app - so far I haven't found any useful coupons, but this could be nice. My son loves the PBS KIds and Disney apps. Again, this would be cool for families.
OVERALL:
This is a decent, low-end printer, with some novel features that would make it great for some personal and home uses. It doesn't print the best photos and it's not as fast as some. At this price, though, it would be a good deal for many users.
198 of 207 people found the following review helpful.
A nice basic photo printer with a few extra features
By A. Boston
Watch Video Here: http://www.amazon.com/review/R240L6BWYFEUOG UPDATE Oct 2010: I printed probably about 4 or 5 4x6 prints, and maybe 6 or 7 8x10 prints and now it's out of ink. While I'm fine with using this printer for printing snapshots for photo albums in the 4x6 size(or black and white normal documents), when you get to 8x10 size photos, I wasn't happy with the sharpness, color or detail. My camera is an SLR, so they can be blown up quite big. As I pointed out in the video review, the colors will vary widely from what you see on your monitor before printing. And this is a whole 'nother bag of worms based on your monitor being in RGB and printers being in CMYK color calibration. But it seemed like a bigger difference then I'm used to.
UPDATE June 2010: An Amazon staffer has informed me "I work with Amazon and wanted to confirm that the paper included with the product does not come with every printer. This was only for the trial versions." That was something I thought was so great about this particular product, but please disregard it in my video review.
I just got this HP photosmart printer and while it has some aspects of it I don't personally like, I think it will be a nice basic photo printer for those with limited computer abilities, or who just want something easy to use that's an attractive looking machine. It's all about having realistic expectations for the price point. If you have a point and shoot you use for fun, this just may be up your alley. If you're into DSLR cameras and editing photos, this might be a little lowbrow for your taste.
Pros:
- IPHONE USERS: right after finishing this review, I went app surfing, and found the motherlode. It's called HP iPrint 3.0, its fantastic and free! Printed photos instantly over wifi, I also used it with my grocery IQ app and printed coupons. Another app features is you can scan directly to your phone for emailing documents.
- Beyond easy to get started. The wireless setup was a pinch in comparison to the hassles I had connecting my brother printer wirelessly.
- scanning black and white documents and photos worked fine. Copying black and white was also as expected.
- it prints out photos fast.
- attractive and will match nicely with other HP products.
- Besides the reusable little zipper bag in my video, there was another larger one that the printer was in. Nice to have a new reusable for the grocery store, and I really admire the effort HP made with making the packaging as eco friendly as possible.
- Eprint feature is now working, and working very well with no problems. You can print to your printer from anywhere based on the printer having its own email address assigned to it.
Cons:
- noisy!
- doesn't have a lot of settings you can customize to your taste directly on the printer. I like to be able to change DPI for different projects, or color contrast, choose PDF or JPG etc if needed. You can pick the paper type and "normal, best" quality printer on your computer when printing to it.
- the color cartridge is just one, instead of separating into three cartridges.
- It's hard to tell over video, but the colors just weren't what I was hoping for. The photos I printed had more yellow/orange/green tones then the original photos. Recently I was doing my own passport renewal photo. I finally got it right and went to print. I was wearing a pink shirt, and it blew out the pink and overly saturated it. I had to change and start over because I knew that wouldn't be acceptable.
- a couple things the software installed that are unnecessary and you're not given an opportunity to pick and choose when you start the software. For instance: a weird extra internet toolbar, etc. I hate extra things that have really nothing to do with the product and are just used to shove the brand in your face, or that HP partnered with or got paid to add to sneak it in and put it on my computer.
90 of 96 people found the following review helpful.
A respectable choice for a "slightly above entry level" option.
By THATCH
I've owned tons of HP Deskjets/Inkjets over the years as well as a Photosmart, so I feel right at home with this printer. Printers are difficult to review because opinions of them vary so greatly from person to person with regards to print quality and desirable features/functions. I will try to keep my impressions short and only comment on the ones that need more explanation.
The good:
-The printer is small and the design is very stylish
-Photo print quality on photo paper is excellent/exceptional on 4x6 HP Advanced Photo paper.
-Printing on regular paper, text, is fine/ok/typical
-The software install on PC was simple/straightforward/easy
-The printer works reliably on wireless and is pretty seamless doing so
-ePrint will be available soon, which opens a whole world of printing possibilities
-Scanning/printing/menu use on the printer is simple after initial setup
-It shipped with a big box of photo paper and nice carrying cases/covers instead of plastic in the packaging
-Being a wireless printer allows everyone in the home to print to it without any complications!
-Registering the printer online was very easy because it automatically filled in the serial number! Awesome!
-It fits a scanner in the same size package that the average printer takes up, saving you desk space
The bad:
-The printer is a little loud and makes some plastic clanking sounds at times
-The initial setup required on the printer menu system was not intuitive. The touch buttons didn't line up how I thought they should with the options on the screen.
-Registering the printer in the ePrint center gave me problems. I finally was successful by using a new email address not registered with HP elsewhere.
-The "on printer screen" tutorial for inserting the ink cartridges is a little misleading. If you do it wrong, then fix, you'll have to power cycle the printer so it "realizes" you installed the ink properly.
Conclusion:
I could recommend this printer for any person who is the casual printer but also would like to print some really high quality photos at home. It fits in well where there are multiple computers on the same wireless network, and even will work with wired computers as long as they are on the same network as the wireless. It seems like HP tried to make things easy, but I'd call this printer more "feature rich" than "dead simple," but I do think all but the most tech averse will be able to work his/her way through any issues.
Compared to other printers out there in this price range, this printer has a lot more features for the money.
See all 457 customer reviews...
Customer Reviews
Most helpful customer reviews
350 of 361 people found the following review helpful.
Some intriguing new features, but not everything you'd want; quality is fine for ordinary use but not professional
By Nathan Andersen
This is a decent low-end printer with a few very cool features, and satisfactory but not stellar performance. It would be the ideal printer for a small family, especially with children who like to print things (and what kids don't like to print things). I'm going to quickly go through the features and mention what I've experienced after playing with it for a few days; where relevant, I'll compare its features to my slightly more expensive Canon printer.
SETUP:
The printer's nicely packed, and easy to put together. The only trick I had was installing the printer cartridges. Like another reviewer said, the printer cartridges don't go in exactly the way the diagram or the illustrated video on the printer's screen suggests. If you make a mistake, it will say that they're not installed, and then you can't just go fix the mistake because it doesn't recognize you've fixed it unless you power off and power on again. One other thing I like is that the whole thing comes with a handy canvas carrying tote. That'll be nice because I may occasionally bring it home.
WIRELESS:
Setting up this printer as a wireless printer was extremely easy. I've setup about 5 different wireless printers over the past year and this was by far the easiest. What made it simple was that the instructions on the printer's screen show you exactly how to connect it to a local wireless point, and then when you install the software on the screen it automatically recognizes the printer as there to be used. Easy stuff.
PHOTOS:
It's advertised as a photo printer, and it does okay with photos but not great. I printed an 8.5 x 11 glossy of my family on quality photo paper and from far away it looks fine, but if you get close you'll see evidence of print lines. It's especially evident on skin, where you can see the little lines that make it almost look like your subjects had been sleeping on corduroy pants and had little fading line indentations left behind.
PRINTING:
For other kinds of print jobs, where fine details are less important, the printer does a good job and things look nice. It's pretty slow, though. It's not nearly fast enough for most professional office use, so the speed alone pretty much qualifies this as a home use printer. My Canon PIXMA MX860, for example, is quite a bit faster, and prints better photos. Of course, that one is bulkier than this one, and costs a bit more.
SCANNING:
The Photosmart scans just fine, though if you want any kind of control you have to scan from the software that installs on your computer with the driver. I tried scanning a page of text to send to my computer using just the controls on the printer and it ended up scanning only half of the page, and inverting the layout from the way it was actually placed on the scan bed. You can only scan one page at a time - there's no feeding.
Additionally, it only scans things as images, that it can send either as .jpg or .pdf files. That means you can't produce an editable text document from a scan unless you have additional software that can convert the images into such. My Canon Pixma MX860 does give me the option to create .txt files.
COPY:
Works fine, exactly as you'd expect.
FAX:
Doesn't exist. This is not a fax machine, so the "All-in-One" might be a bit of a misnomer - then again, who uses fax machines anymore? I have fax capability on all my other printers and I've never had the need to use it. When I absolutely need to fax, I use my office's dedicated machine. One more reason, though, that this wouldn't work as an all-in-one office printer even for a small office, since sometimes business use requires faxing.
WEB:
There are two web features this comes with. One, apparently, doesn't work yet (as of June 30, 2010) but is (allegedly) coming soon. That's the "ePrint" function, that allows a registered user to print to this printer from anywhere on the web, even if they aren't anywhere close to the printer. I'd love to be able to print out stuff I'll need the next day from home, so it'll be ready for me when I arrive at my office, so this is a feature I'm looking forward to.
The other feature is what's called "Print Apps" - basically, you register for print apps online at HPs site (several will be already set up for you if you accept the Web features during setup ... in fact, right now as far as I can tell every one of the available apps is already set up for you, though it looks like they are planning to have a lot more apps.) Anyhow, the webapps allow you to print directly from the web. I kind of like the Sudoku app, that allows me to print Sudoku puzzles directly from the printer. There's also a Coupon app - so far I haven't found any useful coupons, but this could be nice. My son loves the PBS KIds and Disney apps. Again, this would be cool for families.
OVERALL:
This is a decent, low-end printer, with some novel features that would make it great for some personal and home uses. It doesn't print the best photos and it's not as fast as some. At this price, though, it would be a good deal for many users.
198 of 207 people found the following review helpful.
A nice basic photo printer with a few extra features
By A. Boston
Watch Video Here: http://www.amazon.com/review/R240L6BWYFEUOG UPDATE Oct 2010: I printed probably about 4 or 5 4x6 prints, and maybe 6 or 7 8x10 prints and now it's out of ink. While I'm fine with using this printer for printing snapshots for photo albums in the 4x6 size(or black and white normal documents), when you get to 8x10 size photos, I wasn't happy with the sharpness, color or detail. My camera is an SLR, so they can be blown up quite big. As I pointed out in the video review, the colors will vary widely from what you see on your monitor before printing. And this is a whole 'nother bag of worms based on your monitor being in RGB and printers being in CMYK color calibration. But it seemed like a bigger difference then I'm used to.
UPDATE June 2010: An Amazon staffer has informed me "I work with Amazon and wanted to confirm that the paper included with the product does not come with every printer. This was only for the trial versions." That was something I thought was so great about this particular product, but please disregard it in my video review.
I just got this HP photosmart printer and while it has some aspects of it I don't personally like, I think it will be a nice basic photo printer for those with limited computer abilities, or who just want something easy to use that's an attractive looking machine. It's all about having realistic expectations for the price point. If you have a point and shoot you use for fun, this just may be up your alley. If you're into DSLR cameras and editing photos, this might be a little lowbrow for your taste.
Pros:
- IPHONE USERS: right after finishing this review, I went app surfing, and found the motherlode. It's called HP iPrint 3.0, its fantastic and free! Printed photos instantly over wifi, I also used it with my grocery IQ app and printed coupons. Another app features is you can scan directly to your phone for emailing documents.
- Beyond easy to get started. The wireless setup was a pinch in comparison to the hassles I had connecting my brother printer wirelessly.
- scanning black and white documents and photos worked fine. Copying black and white was also as expected.
- it prints out photos fast.
- attractive and will match nicely with other HP products.
- Besides the reusable little zipper bag in my video, there was another larger one that the printer was in. Nice to have a new reusable for the grocery store, and I really admire the effort HP made with making the packaging as eco friendly as possible.
- Eprint feature is now working, and working very well with no problems. You can print to your printer from anywhere based on the printer having its own email address assigned to it.
Cons:
- noisy!
- doesn't have a lot of settings you can customize to your taste directly on the printer. I like to be able to change DPI for different projects, or color contrast, choose PDF or JPG etc if needed. You can pick the paper type and "normal, best" quality printer on your computer when printing to it.
- the color cartridge is just one, instead of separating into three cartridges.
- It's hard to tell over video, but the colors just weren't what I was hoping for. The photos I printed had more yellow/orange/green tones then the original photos. Recently I was doing my own passport renewal photo. I finally got it right and went to print. I was wearing a pink shirt, and it blew out the pink and overly saturated it. I had to change and start over because I knew that wouldn't be acceptable.
- a couple things the software installed that are unnecessary and you're not given an opportunity to pick and choose when you start the software. For instance: a weird extra internet toolbar, etc. I hate extra things that have really nothing to do with the product and are just used to shove the brand in your face, or that HP partnered with or got paid to add to sneak it in and put it on my computer.
90 of 96 people found the following review helpful.
A respectable choice for a "slightly above entry level" option.
By THATCH
I've owned tons of HP Deskjets/Inkjets over the years as well as a Photosmart, so I feel right at home with this printer. Printers are difficult to review because opinions of them vary so greatly from person to person with regards to print quality and desirable features/functions. I will try to keep my impressions short and only comment on the ones that need more explanation.
The good:
-The printer is small and the design is very stylish
-Photo print quality on photo paper is excellent/exceptional on 4x6 HP Advanced Photo paper.
-Printing on regular paper, text, is fine/ok/typical
-The software install on PC was simple/straightforward/easy
-The printer works reliably on wireless and is pretty seamless doing so
-ePrint will be available soon, which opens a whole world of printing possibilities
-Scanning/printing/menu use on the printer is simple after initial setup
-It shipped with a big box of photo paper and nice carrying cases/covers instead of plastic in the packaging
-Being a wireless printer allows everyone in the home to print to it without any complications!
-Registering the printer online was very easy because it automatically filled in the serial number! Awesome!
-It fits a scanner in the same size package that the average printer takes up, saving you desk space
The bad:
-The printer is a little loud and makes some plastic clanking sounds at times
-The initial setup required on the printer menu system was not intuitive. The touch buttons didn't line up how I thought they should with the options on the screen.
-Registering the printer in the ePrint center gave me problems. I finally was successful by using a new email address not registered with HP elsewhere.
-The "on printer screen" tutorial for inserting the ink cartridges is a little misleading. If you do it wrong, then fix, you'll have to power cycle the printer so it "realizes" you installed the ink properly.
Conclusion:
I could recommend this printer for any person who is the casual printer but also would like to print some really high quality photos at home. It fits in well where there are multiple computers on the same wireless network, and even will work with wired computers as long as they are on the same network as the wireless. It seems like HP tried to make things easy, but I'd call this printer more "feature rich" than "dead simple," but I do think all but the most tech averse will be able to work his/her way through any issues.
Compared to other printers out there in this price range, this printer has a lot more features for the money.

This Page is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com
CERTAIN CONTENT THAT APPEARS ON THIS SITE COMES FROM AMAZON SERVICES LLC. THIS CONTENT IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE OR REMOVAL AT ANY TIME.
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar