Features:
 - Professional-looking, continuous-tone, dye-sublimation prints, up to 8 by 10 inches
 - Prints directly from SmartMedia and PC cards
 - LCD preview and information screen
 - USB and parallel interfaces
 - Prints up to 50 copies at a time
 
  
 Description:
  The Olympus Camedia P-400 uses advanced dye-sublimation technology to  print an extremely sharp image on high-quality photo paper. The result looks and  feels like a traditional photograph. The P-400 also accepts a digital camera's  SmartMedia or PC Card directly, and it has USB and parallel interfaces for easy  PC connectivity.  Weighing over 30 pounds, constructed of heavy plastic, and accented with metal  controls, the Camedia P-400 impressed us with its sturdy design right out of the  box. To test the printer, we captured photos on a 16 MB CompactFlash card,  placed the card in a CompactFlash-to-PCMCIA adapter (not included), and inserted  the adapter in the printer. (Our evaluation model came with the P-RBN photo ink  cartridge already installed, but it is easily replaced through the front access  panel. Also, our unit did not include driver software, so we were unable to test  PC functionality.) Using the menu-driven LCD, jog dial, and arrow keys, we  specified our paper type (A4), input source (PC Card), and output photo size (8  by 10 inches). We pressed the Print button, and after 2 minutes and 58 seconds  the P-400 rewarded us with a beautiful 8-by-10-inch photograph.   The Camedia P-400's color was very natural, not neon bright or oversaturated,  and its tinting was slightly cool (more blue than red). Resolution was only 314  dpi, but the dye-sublimation technology showed no visible grain. The results  were better than many we've seen from 1,200 dpi ink-jet printers. We also  printed a slightly soft photograph and then used the printer's sharpening  function in an attempt to improve it. Unfortunately, unwanted pixelation  increased along with any positive sharpening affects. Printing speed was slow  but steady at 2:58 for each 8-by-10 print. Several minutes were required to  print one index/proof sheet of 20 photos, with nearly all of that time spent  processing the CompactFlash card's data, not actually printing.   With only a casual glance, we could have easily mistaken the P-400's output as  coming from a photo lab. Only close scrutiny revealed minor pixelation, which  reflected the limit of our digital photo more than that of the printer. The  initial cost is high, and the dye-sublimation ink cartridges and photo paper are  expensive; but if you can afford it, the P-400 Camedia makes a fine companion  for your digital camera. --Mike Brown   Pros:   - Easy walk-up printing of digital photos 
 - Prints have the look and feel of traditional photos 
    Cons:   - Substantial cost for consumables 
 - Not for general-purpose printing 
  
 |