I think you mean 'Can you use all in one printers solemnly as printers?". If that is what you mean, then the answer is yes.yes
yes
It is advisable to only use ink that has been manufactured by HP. All ink is different and you could risk causing damage to your printer if you use any other brand.
hard ware sharing means that a hardware is connectted with network and all the users of that network can use that hardware such that a in library we have only one printer but all can use that
A person might want to buy a Canon All-In-One printer to use as a basic printer for documents at home. A person might also want the other features such as the scanner and copier.
One can not use photo paper in a laser printer. Photopaper is unsuitable for the use in a laser printer due to the technique which the laser printer uses to deliver his inkt to the paper. For the best result in printing photo's one needs to use a good Inktjet printer.
The Canon Pixma MX330 All-in-One Inkjet Printer with USB 2.0 will work on Mac.
you can use any printer having USB interface.. if you are talking of old laptop then you can also use the lpt printer.. its all about which ports (usb, lpt) is having your laptop.. now a days every laptop is having only usb port ..
You should only use a Dell cartridge with a Dell printer.
According to Hewlett-Packard, the C3180 ink cartridges fit in the Photosmart all-in-one printer (a copier, scanner, and printer). HP and Amazon both sell this printer.
Connect your printer to one of computers, and share it for all computers in your network. Or if your printer has its own network interface, connect it directly to the router and use it (you might have to configure it for your network settings).
Usually a printer can only use one type of ink, however you can look on the manufacturer's website to find what cartridges are compatible with your specific printer.
It depends on if you have a net-workable printer or not. If you have a wireless or ethernet equipt printer then you could use an wireless router that usually has 4 ethernet ports. I have my computers (six of them) hooked to an ethernet switch (and a couple connected wireless) which is hooked to a wireless router. My printer is wireless (or ethernet capable) and can be used by all my computers without doing a thing. As long as the computers AND the printer stay on the same network then they can all print. Most of my computers are Macs and I can use the "Location" feature to switch back and forth from my "internet DSL" location back to my "offline local" network. If you only have a USB printer then you could use the printer sharing feature on your computer and then it would work but you would always have to have that one computer on ALL the time. There are also USB servers that use an ethernet cable to connect to the network, you just plug the USB cable from the printer into the server and then it is plugged into the computer, ethernet switch, router, etc.
You can hook more than one printer up to your system. Your default printer is basically the one that your document automatically goes to when you click on print. Whichever printer you use the most is the one you want to set as your default. It is usaully going to be the printer that you use to do basic tasks like print emails, letters, or pages that you just want a hard copy of. You would leave more specialized printers or printers that use expenive inks as printers that you switch to, instead of your default.