One of the first office printers to have wireless networking built in is Samsung's ML-2152W mono laser...The ML-2152W is a no-nonsense office workhorse of a printer...It offers a maximum print resolution of up to 1,200 x 1,200 dpi (dots per inch) and a rated print speed of 20 pages per minute for A4 or Letter pages...The claimed life for the starter toner cartridge...
"The only downside may be the Sync-thru network software can be cumbersome at first, but you don't have to mess with it after you've got it installed on your lan workstations so it really isn't worth worrying over! I bought the 2152W from Newegg for xxx and xx+change shipping..."
"The 2250 series looks a little cheaper and has less features,..."
Everything included; wireless connectivity as standard...Fiddly software installation
Verdict:
A small workgroup printer that includes everything in the...The ML-2152W is well featured for paper handling...The full list of ports includes USB2, parallel and 10/100BaseTX Ethernet, while the wireless antenna receives print jobs from any computer with an 802.11b adaptor, both directly...
But not any more - Samsung's ML-2152W laser has set a new trend by providing an 802.11b wireless interface...It's all good stuff, with the exception of the fiddly set of software utilities required to set up the wireless connection...But the wireless interface isn't the only thing that separates the ML-2152W from the network laser crowd...The image quality...
"The last review with a one star rating was for a Mac user..."
"Paid $400 for mine, not surprised that used ones are more than $700..."
"Sometimes I can set it up to print, but anytime the network is reconfigured, it takes me hours, literally hours, to get the right combination to get the printer re-hooked up..."
"I was wary of switching from a well established manufacturer, but I have had so many problems with HP drivers recently that I felt compelled to look elsewhere..."
"Easy to set up on a wireless network, and prints great..."
"The only negative is that "genuine" ink/toner cartridges are expensive, and the cheap knock-offs (approx $75 - we use these) loose a little in overall print quality..."