All copy machines can process colored copy paper. If you are making copies of text the results should be good. However, copying color photos onto colored paper can give strange results.
For 80 gsm paper, it is approx 2.495 kilograms.
a printout
No; toilet paper is primary cellulose with a filling material and sometimes a coloring agent.
This process is called transcription.
Appx. 4.5 grams
The term copy checking is generally used in academic institutes. When examination takes place on hard copy (paper), instructor checks it once the paper is done. The process of paper or examination checking is known as copy checking.
Yes, photocopy paper and copy and print paper are typically the same thing. They are both designed for use in photocopy machines, printers, and other office equipment to produce high-quality copies or prints.
Toner cartridges are the part of a machine that actually make the image appear on the paper. They are used in copy machines and fax machines, as well as other multi-purpose office machines.
There is a tendency to over-copy documents and so waste enormous quantities of paper. The machines also give off ozone and oxides of other gases.
There is no patron saint of copy machines unless those machines are computers. The patron saint of computers and the Internet is St. Isidore of Seville.
The process of xerography was first demonstrated in 1938. The first machines using the process were released in the early 1950s and the first fully automatic machine using the process was release in 1959.
Yes copy fax machines are available at many office suppliers. One such supplier that offers copy fax machines is Office Depot.
Keep the signed paper copy and delete the electronic copy
Digital Copy machines (Xerox, Canon, ect)
If you have a copy machine for blueprints, you can order copy paper through the manufacturer, or from your your regular paper supplier. If you don't have a copy machine, a print shop like Kinko's can accommodate you.
it is super man
a box of white paper