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Print industry boost

More companies will utilize Web printing services as they come online and this will provide a boost for the print industry, noted industry watchers.

Lee Lee Ken, general manager of enterprise sales and services, printing solutions and services at Lexmark Asia-Pacific, said that more companies will put documents in the cloud and have employees "consume" these information on demand, providing their workforce with the flexibility of printing the amount they need.

"Printing in the cloud offers unprecedented scalability of businesses of any size," she added in her e-mail to ZDNet Asia. In this "cloud-enabled paradigm", Lexmark expects that anyone with an Internet connection will discover high-quality printers and publishing resources through the public cloud, wherever they go.
 
Meanwhile, businesses will likely set up internal or private clouds that offer similar print-anywhere convenience for their employees and trusted partners, Lee pointed out.

Lexmark's rival, Canon, has also professed enthusiasm for Web-enabled, print-anywhere services.
Lim Kok Hin, senior director and general manager of Canon Singapore's business imaging solutions and business solutions division, said such services are "an evolving and fresh concept that can theoretically give rise to endless possibilities depending on the customers' needs and demands".

"As cloud computing technology advances, a cloud platform for building and running business applications for Web-enabled printers will transform the way we work," Lim added in his e-mail.

He also noted that the utilization of cloud services globally will increase "due to the trends in information technology and business environment".

Their comments come in the wake of recent announcements by Hewlett-Packard (HP) and Google to advance cloud printing services.

HP revealed last month that it will be launching both its Web printing service, called ePrint, and a series of Web-enabled printers for both home and business users.

In an earlier ZDNet Asia article, it was reported that with ePrint, users can simply e-mail their documents on-the-go to any Web-enabled printer--each comes with a unique e-mail address--and retrieve the document from the specified printer at any time. There will also be no need to install specific drivers for the printers, the article stated.

In April, Google also announced plans to go into cloud printing with its Google Cloud Print project. ZDNet Asia had reported then that the search giant was in the initial stages of developing software that will allow users to print documents through Web-enabled printers or legacy printers via a proxy.

"While no cloud-aware printers exist today, we expect these capabilities to become standard and plan to engage with the printer OEM (original equipment manufacturer) community in the coming months to help drive this effort forward," a Google spokesperson said in the article.



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