Now I know I ain’t the smartest cookie in the jar but I’m also not the idiot one, so I thought. Was very excited to find a program that allows you to print from iPad.
Copy and transfer to your PC or Mac via WiFi.Copy and transfer to another user's iPad Touch using Bluetooth or WiFi (both devices require PrintDirect).Mount your iPad as a network disk on your Mac/PC.Open documents stored in PrintDirect directly into iWork for easy editing.Transfer docs and files via iTunes using USB cable (Apps Tab).Integrated with Exchange & Other Calendars.Utilizes existing calendar entries, no new calendar needed.Print/View Day/Week/Month calendar as well as reminders, shopping lists & to do lists.Supports most email account types, including Exchange 2007 OWA, & some Exchange 2003 servers.View multiple email accounts in single inbox or on their own.Send and Receive emails from your own email accounts.
Convert web pages to PDF documents for sharing.Save web pages as an image for attaching to email.Browse and print web pages to ALL printers.File sharing with several Macs and PCs, even remotely.View/Print, iWork, Pages, Numbers, Keynote, MS Office files.Print/Store PDFs, documents, attachments, emails & images.Print using ALL the same document formats to ALL printers used by your Mac/PC.
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√ Emails √ Attachments √ Web pages √ Documents √ Contacts √ Calendars √ Cloud server files and much more. Print to ALL printers and any document type via your Mac/PC, over a local network or 3G/4G. Print directly to most WiFi/Wireless printers without additional software. With that in mind, we’re rounding up the best at-home printers according to the people. (See our introduction to this series here.) Our recommendations range from our deputy editor’s beloved minimalistic laser printer to something called the EcoTank, which saved a Hollywood screenwriter from his nightmare with ink.Set up your printer to print from your iPad. There are color laser printers, but they’re often prohibitively expensive for personal use. If you want to print in color, you probably want to stick with inkjet printers.
Plus laser printers are faster and have superior print quality with text that looks much more precise and clear. And while inkjet printers can be much cheaper, they don’t tend to last as long as laser printers, and you do have to factor in the cost of more frequent ink refills. Inkjet printers use liquid ink, while laser printers use a powder ink that’s melted on the page. The biggest thing to consider is whether you want an inkjet or a laser printer. Most at-home, nonprofessional printers are all-in-one units, which means they include some form of scanner and fax machine, but if you don’t need those features, you can save a little money by finding a print-only machine. It’s not particularly hard to find a printer that will suit your day-to-day needs. For most of us, a small and discreet printer that can handle the occasional online form or shipping label will be plenty. Unless you’re a lawyer or an author, or in some other profession that relies on printing a lot of documents, you probably don’t need one of those gargantuan, gray, rectangular printers. But one thing most of us don’t think about having until we actually need it is a printer. Over the past two years, your home may have suddenly transformed into a makeshift office complete with a comfortable desk and chair, a wireless keyboard, and a wireless mouse.