A new mobile robotic printer that is only a little bigger than three
stacked hockey pucks will enable people to print anywhere and on any
size page of paper.
Smartphones, tablets and laptops make it easy for people to work on the go, but traditionally, printers have been cumbersome to lug out of the office.
Zuta Labs, based in Jerusalem, reasoned that printers nowadays are
essentially a printhead running back and forth on a moving piece of
paper. The company's approach involves placing a printhead on a set of
small wheels and letting it run across a sheet of paper, thus allowing
printers to become smaller. [10 Technologies That Will Transform Your Life]
"The name 'Zuta' in ancient Aramaic means 'small,'" said Tuvia Elbaum, CEO and founder of Zuta Labs.
The new Zuta Pocket
Printer is about 4 inches (10.2 centimeters) wide and long and 3 inches
(7.5 cm) high, and weighs about 12 ounces (350 grams). It can connect
wirelessly to smartphones, tablets, laptops and PCs via Wi-Fi,
and is supported by Android, iOS, OS X and Windows. A free app from the
company lets you use the printer via a mobile device; a laptop or PC
can also select the printer for use just like any other wirelessly
connected printer.
To print, a person switches on the device, aligns it with the corner of
a sheet of paper and sends the document to it. The printer can print
one average A4 page, measuring 8.27 by 11.7 inches (21 by 29.7 cm),
every 50 to 60 seconds with a resolution of 300 dpi. Zuta Labs noted
that its printer can print on any standard size piece of paper, and
that, in principle, it could print on any surface, Elbaum told Live
Science.
The printer's "omni-wheels" help it turn and move in any direction on a
surface. Laser sensors help control the movement, speed and location of
the device, according to the company.
If a person sends several pages to the device, the printer will stop
when it gets to the bottom of the first page and wait until it is placed
at the top of the next page. Users can then tap on the mobile app, and
the printer will continue to print.
Zuta Labs said the printer's rechargeable lithium-polymer battery
can last about 1 hour, on average — long enough to print about 60
pages. The device charges via a micro-USB port, and takes about 3 hours
to charge fully.
One ink cartridge can print more than 100 pages, according to the
company. Currently, the device prints only in black, although Zuta Labs
said it plans to have a full-color printer in the future. Cartridges are
replaced via a hatch on the bottom of the printer.
The founders of Zuta Labs, which was established in 2014, said the idea
for their printer came in 2013, when they were students at the
Jerusalem College of Technology. A 2014 Kickstarter campaign
to fund Zuta Labs raised $511,662 from 3,081 backers, exceeding its
original goal of raising $400,000. The company plans to ship its
printers to customers in the beginning of 2017.
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