Moore's Law, again
Jul. 30th, 2006 10:14 pmAlmost as long as I have known
nellorat and
supergee, they have owned a home photocopier; they had one years before we moved to New York (and we're still grateful to
cattitude for his help getting that one down the basement stairs during our move in 1992).
Not long after we moved, we had to replace the copier, and again circa 1998--they don't last forever. The second time, we went to an office supply company which we had reason to trust and found the model we needed. The key features that sold us on that particular model were a 1% zoom (which nellorat needed for her collages and for her work) and some ability to perform two-sided copying. The retail price of the copier was around $4200, which was (and is) a lot of money for us. So I went poking around on that newfangled web thing and quickly found the same model for $2200. I took a printout of the lower offer back to the local company, and the salesman immediately gave us a six year service contract free. (That was around an $1800 value; the extra money was worth it to have a local service contract at all.)
Time has passed. Our need for a copier is at least as great as it has ever been, probably higher. We've twice had to renew the service contract on the current machine in one-year installments, but now our fine new copier is so old that spare parts are hard to find, and last week it probably breathed its last. We asked our local company what they would recommend to replace it. They suggested the Ricoh Aficio 1515MF, which does everything our old machine does, plus has fax and network printer/scanner capability, plus a 70-page document feeder, plus "scan once/print many", plus automatic double-siding. No stapling, but man. And it's slightly smaller, and slightly lighter than our current machine. Their price: $4000, including three years of service.
So back I went to the web. There's a place selling brand-new 1515s--the basic version--for $990 on eBay ("Buy it now"). There's another place, AMatterOfFax.com, selling the MF for $1300 with free shipping. And we can get in-house service for the machine from our local supplier for $300/year, on a one-year contract.
Dear me. For some reason, it never occurred to me that Moore's Law was relentlessly driving the price of copiers down, too, but of course it is. I suspect that the next time we have to buy a copier, it will cost $3.75 and will be able to walk out to the car and bring in the paper from Staples. Heck, it will probably be able to call Staples and get the paper delivered.
Not long after we moved, we had to replace the copier, and again circa 1998--they don't last forever. The second time, we went to an office supply company which we had reason to trust and found the model we needed. The key features that sold us on that particular model were a 1% zoom (which nellorat needed for her collages and for her work) and some ability to perform two-sided copying. The retail price of the copier was around $4200, which was (and is) a lot of money for us. So I went poking around on that newfangled web thing and quickly found the same model for $2200. I took a printout of the lower offer back to the local company, and the salesman immediately gave us a six year service contract free. (That was around an $1800 value; the extra money was worth it to have a local service contract at all.)
Time has passed. Our need for a copier is at least as great as it has ever been, probably higher. We've twice had to renew the service contract on the current machine in one-year installments, but now our fine new copier is so old that spare parts are hard to find, and last week it probably breathed its last. We asked our local company what they would recommend to replace it. They suggested the Ricoh Aficio 1515MF, which does everything our old machine does, plus has fax and network printer/scanner capability, plus a 70-page document feeder, plus "scan once/print many", plus automatic double-siding. No stapling, but man. And it's slightly smaller, and slightly lighter than our current machine. Their price: $4000, including three years of service.
So back I went to the web. There's a place selling brand-new 1515s--the basic version--for $990 on eBay ("Buy it now"). There's another place, AMatterOfFax.com, selling the MF for $1300 with free shipping. And we can get in-house service for the machine from our local supplier for $300/year, on a one-year contract.
Dear me. For some reason, it never occurred to me that Moore's Law was relentlessly driving the price of copiers down, too, but of course it is. I suspect that the next time we have to buy a copier, it will cost $3.75 and will be able to walk out to the car and bring in the paper from Staples. Heck, it will probably be able to call Staples and get the paper delivered.
no subject
Date: 2006-07-31 03:01 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-07-31 03:24 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-07-31 05:46 pm (UTC)