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Inkjet printers could be the chip factories of the future, squirting out circuits made from layers of organic semiconducting ink, according to researchers. Written by Rupert Goodwins, Contributor ...
Print your own chips: Inkjet printers can use liquid semiconductors to print active displays, and there are even more exotic uses on the way Written by Rupert Goodwins, Contributor April 11, 2002 ...
Canon is in a pickle. Its printers are not affirming the legitimacy of Canon ink cartridges, so it has to tell customers how to use other products.
Canon has become an unusual victim of the global semiconductor shortage, as its printer cartridges are not shipping with chips to confirm they contain genuine ink from the company.
It seems the chip shortage has claimed yet another victim. Canon has been sending out emails to its customers, letting them know that changes are coming to its ink and toner cartridges for ...
Some of Canon’s own toner cartridges are now being detected as fakes — and they’re forcing the company to teach customers how to bypass its ink DRM.
Ink-cartridge chips in Canon products serve several purposes. These uses include preventing the installation of third-party ink cartridges in Canon printers, and identifying errors and relaying ...
Inkjet printers deposit ink on paper. What HP is proposing is to reuse the fluid, which will likely mean building a tiny reservoir into the processor die itself and then engineering a circulation ...
Posted in Peripherals Hacks, Reverse Engineering Tagged circumvention, drm, inkjet printer, man-in-the-middle ← VR Headset With Custom Face Fitting Gets Even More Custom ...
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