personal computing and a word on Johnnie Cochran
Epson Printer: I now have an Epson Stylus CX4600 printer. It is one of those all-in-one wonders that copies, prints, and scans. The CX4600 also has slots for various digital camera memory cards (yes, it can print photos). I wasn’t even looking for the picture making ability but it is nice to know that I have it and got it for a pretty good price. The printer came in at about eighty-five dollars (with tax) from Target and this was not a sale price as was the case for a similar Hewlett-Packard printer.
The CX4600 is kind of slow with printing and copying. The scanning is pretty fast.
Would I recommend the CX4600? The answer is no. I’m not happy with the slow printing and copying speeds. There is also an annoying delay in the printing of anything immediately after you turn the printer on. You have to wait a minute or two before you can do anything. I may tolerate this nonsense but I don’t expect anyone else to.
I have owned two other printers before this one and never had to wait a minute or two after turning the printers on in order to print but maybe this problem is common or universal with printer, scanner and copier combos.
Hewlett Packard: HP is flooding the market with competitively priced printers. However I wanted to avoid HP products. My father owns several HP made products (printer and digital camera) that I picked out for him in part because of price.
In general I have nothing against HP printers or digital cameras but I hate to see a company try and control or dominate the market in any particular product because if it ends up putting other companies out of the printer or digital camera business it will come back to haunt the consumer in higher prices with no competition in sight for the price gouging company. In other words HP may have cheap prices now but when the competition is gone you’ll probably see prices skyrocket. For this reason and others I did not want an HP printer.
One product I will not buy for a reason other than that one mentioned above is HP computers. I actually discourage people from purchasing HP (and Compaq) computers because I just don’t like the way they sell their computers.
With most of their computers they do not give you a disc with a clean copy of the operating system on it. Instead, on a hidden partition from which you can create what they call Recovery Disc they have the ‘Windows XP Home Edition brought to you by Hewlett-Packard’ brand operating system that a person can use to restore his system if tragedy happens.
Any computer you buy should come with a clean set of operating system discs (disc) that you could use if you desired on any IBM based computer you choose and not one chucked full of design and manufacturer specific software. In other words I don’t want Microsoft Windows software with a Compaq or Hewlett-Packard logo on my computer’s desktop. I don’t want a ‘HP Windows’ operating system or a ‘Windows brought to you by HP’ operating system. I want a disc with a regular copy of Microsoft’s Windows XP Home Edition or Professional (or whatever operating system) to come with my new computer.
The bottom line is you should have separate disc(s) for the HP software, third party software, and the operating system. Anything less is not recommended.
Johnnie Cochran: Cochran passed away yesterday. He died of brain cancer. He was sixty-seven. He was a lawyer who became famous (or infamous) for defending O.J. Simpson (former football star, sports commentator and actor) against murder charges. Cochran organized a team of highly skilled and intelligent attorneys and specialist that successful defended O.J. against a pretty strong murder rap.
Previously Cochran was involved in the Civil Rights Movement by defending some controversial and non controversial figures in the Movement.
About American justice and the legal system in the United States Cochran said, “The color of justice is green”.
I was impressed with his smooth style and his ability to clearly spin a tale before a jury. Johnnie Cochran did leave an impression on me. I’m sure he will be missed.