It's been tough to run away the offensive of Kodak TV advertisements newly that strain the cost savings in ink handling by using a Kodak All-in-One printer, plus it's not presently ink savings that are stressed in the newest in the choice, the ESP 5250, which is a usual successor to last year's ESP 5.

Actually, at first quick look you may even believe it was the same printer, as the external jet black casing design is almost the same, along with the dimpled patterning on the scanner cover, the LCD top right with a string of control keys down the side with the compact, front-loading, fixed paper feeder. But, the closer you look at it, the more you realise how much has been detached somewhat than added from its precursor.

Even though the exterior dimensions are just the same (422 x 300 x 175 mm), the LCD display has currently strangely minimized from 3.0 to 2.4 inches as well as the commands are still cute basic. There's a minor alteration in the controls, with the Menu button currently called Home with new Rotate along with Back options.

Speeds in the ESP series have never broken several records plus you'll surely have time to make cups of tea when Best mode text documents crawl out at 2.5ppm (Draft feature is a more reputable 14ppm). Captivatingly, both copying as well as printing speeds for A4 colour prints (strangely, there's only one quality setting for these) were the same at around two minutes if using Kodak's proprietary Home Centre software, until now we managed it 15 seconds faster by the native settings on our computer. 10x15cm photos came out faster at 30 seconds each one, which is completely suitable for this class of printer.

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