I don't know how many times I've cursed my HP PSC 1600 printer/scanner over the past few months. For the longest time, I could only print one page at a time because of the constant paper jams. Documents longer than one page required me to sit at the printer and feed in one piece of paper at a time. It sucked.
As it turns out, the paper-jam problem might have been caused by something other than this printer being a piece of crap. While Elly was fooling around with these iron-on t-shirt printouts last night, she discovered the work of a mini-saboteur:
Unbeknownst to us, our little printer technician had done some unscheduled maintenance on the PSC 1600. I guess Tova thought that the printer needed more Care Bear Power or something, because she jammed this little piece of paper down into the guts of the printer's paper feeder. Once again, I'm amazed at the sophistication of Tova's methods for breaking things. Too bad the HP QA department isn't hiring 1.5 year-olds...
Unbeknownst to us, our little printer technician had done some unscheduled maintenance on the PSC 1600. I guess Tova thought that the printer needed more Care Bear Power or something, because she jammed this little piece of paper down into the guts of the printer's paper feeder. Once again, I'm amazed at the sophistication of Tova's methods for breaking things. Too bad the HP QA department isn't hiring 1.5 year-olds...
Hatten ar din. That's all I have to say. Hatt-baby, hatt-baby.
Inc.com has a cool article about the SawStop guy and the reception he's getting from the power tool industry. How lame is it that the power tool companies would rather suppress something cool out of fear for their profits than incorporate it and make a better product? Sometimes it seems like the larger a company or industry becomes, the smaller its vision shrinks. Sad.