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    I must say that your service is absolutely exceptional and I have recommended your company and products to several friends today; all are serious "printer" people.I retired last year and my friends are all into, or are still working in the photo industry. Sincerely,Gerhard

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    Dear, just to let you know than i realy appreciate your costumer service.
    Thank you
    Denis

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    Just a Thank you and all the best
    Grigore

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    Ce message est simplement pour vous dire que j'ai bien reçu la commande XXXXXX et que je suis très satisfait de la rapidité de la livraison et aussi de la qualité de l'encre. C'est la première fois que j'utilise de l'encre "autre que l'originale" et pour le moment je suis très satisfait. Soyez certain que je vais vous référez à mes amis et collègues de travail et c'est certain que je vais commander à nouveau de chez vous. Merci beaucoup.
    Stéphane

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    Je veux seulement vous dire un gros merci pour la rapidité avec lequel vous avez traité ma demande et aussi pour le petit extra en papier photos,c'est très apprécié.

    Céline

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    I received my order, thank you for your great customer service..
    Judy

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    Hello:

    It is not often people write emails or letters of praise but consider this one of the rare ones!
    I must say, ordering your product was about the easiest imaginable. Coupled with the fact that it arrived here basically “next day” I am thoroughly happy. To tell you the truth, I was expecting to have to go pay full retail for one black cartridge thinking that your’s would take at least a week to arrive but I was wrong, the order arrived before I could even go out to get one!
    Congrats people, I WILL tell all my friends and neighbours about you!

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Printer Cartridges Recycling

Check out HP and the Lavergne Group’s advanced processing technology, which is saving money and resource use.recycling hp printer cartridges by crushing into plastic flakes

MONTREAL — Recycling isn’t usually much fun to watch. Those blue bins aren’t too animated. And don’t we all suspect that as soon as the truck turns the corner it all gets thrown in the landfill anyway? That has actually happened in some places when the value of recycled material went into the toilet.

In some cases, we’re going backwards in recycling. Take just the case of plastic water bottles. We produce 29 billion of them a year, and only 30 percent get recycled, which means an escalating amount of waste (expressed in millions of tons).

But plastic water bottles are eminently recyclable, and earlier this week, in Montreal, I saw them put to good use. Hewlett-Packard, which makes the printer cartridges we all pay dearly for, isn’t content to let them go to landfills. These days, they’re being dismantled instead of shredded — a much cleaner process.

The company started recycling cartridges in 1991 (taking back more than 300 million from inkjet and laser printers), and is getting much better at figuring out how to reuse the plastic. Today, a pilot project in a French-Canadian factory is no longer shredding the cartridges (a process that leaves a contaminated mix of plastic, metal and paper), it’s dismantling them for 50 percent greater yields in recovered plastic. Here’s how it works, according to HP’s Dean Miller:

You can send your cartridges back to their maker in a number of ways (there are programs in 50 countries) and the options include mailing them back in pre-paid envelopes and returning them for credit to Staples stores. Either way, they end up at industrial facilities like the one I visited in Montreal.

But they don’t get crushed. In 2005, after five years of work, HP developed a closed-loop system for recycling printer cartridges that, at the Lavergne Group facility I visited alone, handles a million pounds of plastic every month. Closed loop means the plastic lives again as new cartridges. HP has made more than 500 million printer-ready cartridges through the closed-loop process since 2005.

The closed-loop process is like something out of the movie Brazil — a combination of retro mechanical and high tech. Dismantling (especially in this pilot scale) is much slower than crushing cartridges, of course. The dismantler handles 15 cartridge a minute, and the shredder thousands per hour. But the result is much cleaner: The robot arms scrape off the label, lop off the plastic lid, remove the electronic guts and the foam pad, then toss the remaining plastic bucket into a hopper.

Once shredded, the cartridge material is mixed with 75 to 80 percent plastic bottle waste and then (they wouldn’t let us see this part) combined with special chemical additives to make it strong and pliable — in effect, basically the same as virgin plastic again.

from bottles and cartridges to plastic pellets

Until recently, the process handled only easy-to-recycle PET plastic, but last year polypropylene (PP) was added and almost two million cartridges with PP have been processed.

After having received some flak on the issue, HP has also considerably reduced the packaging going into its ink cartridges. There’s no U.S. law mandating that kind of waste reduction, but so-called Green Dot laws in Europe and Asia give impetus to that kind of reform. Green Dot makes manufacturers responsible for their packaging, which in effect gives them huge motivation to reduce the amount they include with products. Buy toothpaste in the U.S. and it comes in the box; buy the identical brand in Europe and it stands on its cap.

Strong corporate lobbies discourage the European approach here, but on March 25 Maine became the first state in the U.S. to enact an extended producer responsibility (EPR) law. And some 19 states have rules requiring takeback of electronic equipment. A national law would tie all of this together, and it will be a brave legislator who shepherds a bill through to passage.

As a car writer, I’m always looking for an auto angle, and I found it in a Lavergne Group office displaying a number of auto parts, including a taillight assembly. They’re all made from plastic recycled in the plant. Lavergne has a contract with Ford to provide plastic for Econoline van front ends, and because of the strong European end-of-life vehicle laws it’s looking at setting up a branch to serve carmakers in Germany.

Knowing about all this should stay your hand when hit by the impulse to throw away that spent printer cartridge. Not only is there money in it (get thee to the nearest Staples story) but properly recycled it will again dispense ink.

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Conductive plastics promise to revolutionise solar cells

New plastics promise to slash the cost of key solar panel components

Danny Bradbury, BusinessGreen, 08 Apr 2010

Solar panels

Solar panel components that can be printed using technology akin to an inkjet cartridge may not be too far away from commercialisation, if a team of researchers at Princeton University have their way.

A group of scientists at the university announced last week that it has developed a way to treat plastic that will make it highly conductive for electricity after it has been moulded into different shapes.

The technique, developed by researchers at the University’s Organic and Polymer Electronics Laboratory, could be used to dramatically lower the cost of solar cells by replacing costly indium tin oxide (ITO), which has traditionally been used as a transparent conducting metal in solar panels.

The approach would also provide solar panel manufacturers with a more flexible conductive material, potentially opening the door for a wide range of new panel designs.

Conductive plastics have been available for some time, but their characteristics mean that processing them into a usable design degraded their ability to conduct electricity.

However, the Princeton researchers claim that their new production process means the plastics can be shaped without reducing their conductive capacity.

The secret to the new approach lies in the plastics being treated with an acid after they are shaped, in a process known as post-disposition solvent annealing.

"This process has enabled a wide incorporation of conducting polymers in organic electronics; conducting polymers that are not typically processable can now be deposited from solution and their productivity subsequently enhanced to practical levels via a simple and straightforward solvent annealing process, " the team said in its paper describing the process, which was published in the 8 March issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy Of Sciences in the US.

The new technique could feasibly be used to produce solar cells and other optical electronics such as flexible displays in large quantities using industrial printers.

Yueh-Lin Loo, a former assistant professor at the University of Texas, who led the research team said the approach could potentially be scaled up using mass production presses similar to those used to print newspapers.

"Being able to essentially paint on electronics is a big deal," Loo said. " You could distribute the plastics in cartridges the way printer ink is sold, and you wouldn’t need exotic machines to print the patterns."

She added that a range of other applications could be used for the technology, including medical devices that change colour according to levels of nitric oxide, which is a key indicator of ear infection in children.

Metawatch Offers New Canon PGI-220 Inkjet Cartridge

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Metawatch is pleased to announce the immediate availability of the PGI-220 & CLI-221 Series of Inkjet  Cartridges.

In keeping with Metawatch’s past history of breakthrough pricing to its customer base we are pleased to announce unit pricing of these cartridges at $6.95 e.a.

These cartridges will be listed shortly on Metawatch’s site under Canon Compatible Cartridges.

Thank you for shopping at Metawatch