![]() ![]() The WorkCentre 3550X offers a complete factory for paper-based office communications and looks a lot better value than similar products from HP, such as the LaserJet M3035. The scanner couldn’t be faulted, though, with colour documents faithfully reproduced to a high quality. Print quality is variable as although text is absolutely fine, we found the high levels of detail in photos and scanned pictures was marred slightly by a banding effect. Fax to email is supported and documents can also be sent directly from a PC using the fax driver, although to access the printer’s address book you need a USB connection. From CentreWare you create entries that describe either an email recipient or a destination system and target folder, which appear as options in the printer’s scan menu.įor fax operations the printer can hold a speed dial list of up to 200 entries and this can be created swiftly by importing a text file. Scan functions are extensive as they can be sent directly to multiple email addresses, to network systems using FTP or SMB or to a local USB stick. When users send faxes they can browse through a global address book at the printer’s control panel and pick a recipient from it. ![]() For the latter, the printer supports scanning directly to email via LDAP and this requires the IP address or hostname of an LDAP server to be provided. ![]() Installation is a swift process and it’s worth visiting the printer’s CentreWare web server first to get the various scan, fax and email features set up. The 3550X on review has the base 500-sheet tray, the 3550XT has an extra 500-sheet tray, and the 3550XTS adds a wheeled printer stand. ![]() The family comprises three models and the only difference between them is what they’re sitting on. ![]()
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