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・ Printed circuit board milling
・ Printed Circuit Corporation
・ Printed electronics
・ Printed matter
・ Printed matter (patent law)
・ Printed Matter, Inc
・ Printed media in the Soviet Union
・ Printed segmented electroluminescence
・ Printed T-shirt
・ Printemps
・ Printemps (ballet)
・ Printemps de Bourges
・ Printemps et autres saisons
・ Printemps, avril carillonne
・ Printer
Printer (computing)
・ Printer (publishing)
・ Printer cable
・ Printer cartridge
・ Printer Clips
・ Printer Command Language
・ Printer driver
・ Printer Job Language
・ Printer point
・ Printer port (disambiguation)
・ Printer Setup Utility
・ Printer steganography
・ Printer Working Group
・ Printer's Alley
・ Printer's Devil


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Printer (computing) : ウィキペディア英語版
Printer (computing)


In computing, a printer is a peripheral which makes a persistent human readable representation of graphics or text on paper or similar physical media.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Printer - Definition of printer by Merriam-Webster )〕 The two most common printer mechanisms are black and white laser printers used for common documents, and color inkjet printers which can produce high quality photograph output.
The world's first computer printer was a 19th-century mechanically driven apparatus invented by Charles Babbage for his difference engine. This system used a series of metal rods with characters printed on them and stuck a roll of paper against the rods to print the characters. The first commercial printers generally used mechanisms from electric typewriters and Teletype machines, which operated in a similar fashion. The demand for higher speed led to the development of new systems specifically for computer use. Among the systems widely used through the 1980s were daisy wheel systems similar to typewriters, line printers that produced similar output but at much higher speed, and dot matrix systems that could mix text and graphics but produced relatively low-quality output. The plotter was used for those requiring high quality line art like blueprints.
The introduction of the low-cost laser printer in 1984 with the first HP LaserJet, and the addition of PostScript in next year's Apple LaserWriter, set off a revolution in printing known as desktop publishing. Laser printers using PostScript mixed text and graphics, like dot-matrix printers, but at quality levels formerly available only from commercial typesetting systems. By 1990, most simple printing tasks like fliers and brochures were now created on personal computers and then laser printed; expensive offset printing systems were being dumped as scrap. The HP Deskjet of 1988 offered the same advantages as laser printer in terms of flexibility, but produced somewhat lower quality output (depending on the paper) from much less expensive mechanisms. Inkjet systems rapidly displaced dot matrix and daisy wheel printers from the market. By the 2000s high-quality printers of this sort had fallen under the $100 price point and became commonplace.
The rapid update of internet email through the 1990s and into the 2000s has largely displaced the need for printing as a means of moving documents, and a wide variety of reliable storage systems means that a "physical backup" is of little benefit today. Even the desire for printed output for "offline reading" while on mass transit or aircraft has been displaced by e-book readers and tablet computers. Today, traditional printers are being used more for special purposes, like printing photographs or artwork, and are no longer a must-have peripheral.
Starting around 2010, 3D printing became an area of intense interest, allowing the creation of physical objects with the same sort of effort as an early laser printer required to produce a brochure. These devices are in their earliest stages of development and have not yet become commonplace.
== Types of printers ==
''Personal'' printers are primarily designed to support individual users, and may be connected to only a single computer. These printers are designed for low-volume, short-turnaround print jobs, requiring minimal setup time to produce a hard copy of a given document. However, they are generally slow devices ranging from 6 to around 25 pages per minute (ppm), and the cost per page is relatively high. However, this is offset by the on-demand convenience. Some printers can print documents stored on memory cards or from digital cameras and scanners.
''Networked'' or ''shared'' printers are "designed for high-volume, high-speed printing." They are usually shared by many users on a network and can print at speeds of 45 to around 100 ppm. The Xerox 9700 could achieve 120 ppm.
A ''virtual printer'' is a piece of computer software whose user interface and API resembles that of a printer driver, but which is not connected with a physical computer printer.
A ''3D printer'' is a device for making a three-dimensional object from a 3D model or other electronic data source through additive processes in which successive layers of material ( including plastics, metals, food, cement, wood, and other materials) are laid down under computer control. It is called a printer by analogy with an inkjet printer which produces a two-dimensional document by a similar process of depositing a layer of ink on paper.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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