In the beginning there was the teletype terminal. This
electro-mechanical bit of clunky technology would whisk the selected letter into
position before a little hammer punched an impression of the line-up letter onto
the paper.
The ink was supplied on a ribbon. The early ribbons were impregnated with ink
that gradually faded. So along came plastic ribbons which produced a sharper
image.
So back in the 1980s all printers pretended to be teletype terminals. Nobody
had dreamt up printer-drivers. If you wanted bold or italic, you put what was
called 'the escape code' into the document. This involved holding down the
escape key and typing the letter B or I. The printer would not print the letter
but start printing in the style chosen.
Early computer printers were typewriters without a keyboard. Evolution is a
slow business so you could buy computer printers with keyboards for many years.
Early printers could double as a typewriter.
You could change the font by fitting a new print head. There was a short era
of the 'daisy wheel' printer which had the characters arranged like
petals around the centre. This would make a fearful noise as it stamped out the
letters. If not fixed down it could jump off the table.
Letters are fine for the Latin alphabet with its limited number of
characters. But in Asia where pictograms required thousands of images, a new
solution was required. Instead of solid letters, they invented 'dot matrix'
technology which composed letters in a series of dots. Any character or shape
can be composed with little dots.
Again, it was a little hammer that punched the ink from a ribbon onto the
paper. Evolution, as we noted , is a slow business. Somebody came up with the
idea of little heaters that would melt the plastic on the ribbon onto the
paper.
Instead of a little wire pushing the ink from the ribbon onto the paper, one
bright spark discovered that a spot of ink could be fired at the paper by
super-heating it. So the ink-jet was born. Without a ribbon which could
only have one ink, colour
printing became a possibility.
While all this was going on, the laser printer was evolving from the
photocopier. It would have happened much quicker if patents and the
operation of the real-world monopolists had not prevented various innovators to
bringing this technology to the office.
Computer magazines would carefully explain
how it was technically impossible for one machine to act as both a photocopier and
printer so don't believe everything you read in the technical press until
you have checked who pays for all the advertising.
The laser has long been recognised as top quality. However, the
dye-sublimation process has capped laser technology. This process returns to
the use of a ribbon that is permeated with solid dye which is vaporised by
a heater. This condenses on the paper and produces the most intense
colours. Inkjets can deposit 1200 dots per inch but the inks have to be placed
alongside each other to create a coloured image. Vaporised dyes can be added on
top of each other.
The cost of printers has tumbled as the technology became intrinsically
simpler. In the early days of computing, the talk was of a paperless office.
But there seems little chance that were are going to give up our printers.
Picture technologies
Scanning

© Charles Jones 2001-6