Well, I sorta knew this day was going to happen, mostly because I don't trust big business...
Awhile back I needed a new printer and bought a HP Officejet. For a time I rented it by buying their incredibly overpriced and underfilled ink cartridges, then discovered generic cartridges that are actually filled to capacity and are far less costly. Let's see, less expensive and actually full of ink; what's not to like? Well, HP didn't like it and a few years ago they "updated software" to make anything not made by HP to stop the printer from functioning. My position was then and still is that once the printer was sold it was my printer and how dare they go into it and deliberately make it non-functional? I wasn't alone in my outrage and HP backed down, but I sorta knew they'd be back. Yesterday I got an error message telling me that I had depleted cartridges that needed to be replaced. So I did replace them (when shaken I could hear the ink inside), with full generic cart's. Same error message. My message to HP, is that I'll buy a new printer today, one with ink tanks, and not of the HP brand. Nothing of the HP brand EVER AGAIN. Phooey on HP! I vowed to never buy another HP product those years ago when they first did this and kept that promise, and renewed that vow yesterday. At this time I don't know if it'll be a Brothers, Epson, or Canon, but I do know that it'll have ink tanks (Epson brand refills are $13 per and good for thousands of pages), and be a multifunction printer. One other thing that I learned from the HP printer... I like having a copier, fax, yada, yada, all in house and in one unit.
FWIW, I have never rented anything that I use frequently, and everything I purchase can accept and use whatever I put into it to make it run. Why does HP think folks would want to pay for the privilege of continuing to use something that they purchased outright? I'm someone who is in the market frequently, but HP is on my "do not purchase" list of manufacturers now. Unlike some folks I NEVER forget. It bugs me to trash something that should still work, but HP did that and not me.
We need a class action lawsuit. I would definitely join in. I would love to have HP pay for the new printer that they forced me to buy. Are any lawyers reading this?
Awhile back I needed a new printer and bought a HP Officejet. For a time I rented it by buying their incredibly overpriced and underfilled ink cartridges, then discovered generic cartridges that are actually filled to capacity and are far less costly. Let's see, less expensive and actually full of ink; what's not to like? Well, HP didn't like it and a few years ago they "updated software" to make anything not made by HP to stop the printer from functioning. My position was then and still is that once the printer was sold it was my printer and how dare they go into it and deliberately make it non-functional? I wasn't alone in my outrage and HP backed down, but I sorta knew they'd be back. Yesterday I got an error message telling me that I had depleted cartridges that needed to be replaced. So I did replace them (when shaken I could hear the ink inside), with full generic cart's. Same error message. My message to HP, is that I'll buy a new printer today, one with ink tanks, and not of the HP brand. Nothing of the HP brand EVER AGAIN. Phooey on HP! I vowed to never buy another HP product those years ago when they first did this and kept that promise, and renewed that vow yesterday. At this time I don't know if it'll be a Brothers, Epson, or Canon, but I do know that it'll have ink tanks (Epson brand refills are $13 per and good for thousands of pages), and be a multifunction printer. One other thing that I learned from the HP printer... I like having a copier, fax, yada, yada, all in house and in one unit.
FWIW, I have never rented anything that I use frequently, and everything I purchase can accept and use whatever I put into it to make it run. Why does HP think folks would want to pay for the privilege of continuing to use something that they purchased outright? I'm someone who is in the market frequently, but HP is on my "do not purchase" list of manufacturers now. Unlike some folks I NEVER forget. It bugs me to trash something that should still work, but HP did that and not me.
We need a class action lawsuit. I would definitely join in. I would love to have HP pay for the new printer that they forced me to buy. Are any lawyers reading this?
Brian. Lover of SE razors.