• okamiueru@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      There are two common types of laser printers. Those that have special paper that react to heat, such as receipt printers, would fit the description.

      The other laser printers… Hm, I don’t think your description is accurate either. It’s more that the laser electrically charges ink particles so that they jump on to a separate roller that gets rolled on to the paper.

      I’m no expert though.

      • ChaoticNeutralCzech@lemmy.one
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        8 months ago

        I am not aware of any receipt printers using lasers - thermal printers have an array of resistors that get hot when necessary. I know how a laser printer works and it is hard to explain in 12 or so words. Inkjets are way easier, you can just say “squirt squirt oops”. Anyway…

        1. A photosensitive drum gets a negative electrostatic charge.
        2. A laser shining through a rotating prism scans lines across the drum’s surface. This removes charge from parts of the drum that should not be covered in toner.
        3. A high-voltage corona wire inside the toner reservoir charges an amount of toner positively.
        4. The charged drum rotates past the corona wire, getting covered in toner where its negative charge remains.
        5. Paper is pushed against the drum and the powdery toner is transferred to it.
        6. The paper continues into a fuser, a little oven where a heating element briefly makes the toner so hot that it melts, its powder particles making a permanent bond among themselves and with the paper. (The heater is usually stationary and heats the paper from below. The fuser drum that pushes paper against the heater can get sticky and pick up some of the toner, making images repeat down the page. This is the most common failure mode that cannot be resolved through regular maintenance such as replacing the toner cartridge and printing cleaning pages. However, almost all laser printers have a cheap fuser module or its drum available so it is usually worth replacing.)
      • frezik
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        8 months ago

        It’s an accurate description of laser printers. The “powder” in the description are small plastic flakes (toner), and the paper is baked so that powder melts into it.

        Receipt printers have no additional consumables beyond the paper. The heat itself is all the paper needs.

          • frezik
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            8 months ago

            Yup, that’s what toner is. Little black plastic flecks. If you break a toner cartridge and get it everywhere, try not to breathe too hard.

  • prole@sh.itjust.works
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    8 months ago

    I thought this was a D&D alignment chart at first… And yes, Inkjet printers are chaotic evil.

  • ALoafOfBread@lemmy.ml
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    8 months ago

    Inkjet: uses yellow ink to dye paper.

    But what if it’s just black text?

    Inkjet: USES YELLOW INK TO DYE PAPER

    • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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      8 months ago

      … server/enterprise level HDDs are loud af, I swear some brands are dedicated to it.

      That leaves us only with the tiny WD Red Plus (but not Red Pro), above 20TB afaik only Exos (from X21 onwards) doesn’t alert the neighbours.

      But in (second half-ish?) of 90s HDDs differed a lot in terms of loudness. I was one of those nerds with custom (fully home made) water loop just to achieve some level of quietness.

  • dan@upvote.au
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    8 months ago

    Is the FPU a reference to the Pentium FDIV bug?? What a throwback.

        • frezik
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          8 months ago

          In other words, “computes numbers incorrectly”.

          You don’t have to overthink it on a meme that describes a hard drive as “remembers numbers loudly”.

    • go_go_gadget@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Bitcoin: An excel spreadsheet a bunch of people agree on.
      Machine Learning: Electrons in a room banging on typewriters.
      Blockchain: A marketing term for linked lists.

  • FellowEnt@sh.itjust.works
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    8 months ago

    I love my inkjet. It’s so nice to be able to do my own high quality prints for the wall and for friends.