How Do You Save on Printing Costs?
Add to iTunes | Add to YouTube | Add to Google | RSS Feed
Tell me if this sounds familiar: you go to print a web page, and find you’ve printed fifty pages instead of just a small part of one page. You realize you forgot to copy the text. What do you do when you want to print parts of a web page? You almost need an editor for printouts. PrintWhatYouLike allows you to have just that.
- Format any webpage for printing in seconds – no more pasting into Word.
- Save money and the environment by reducing your paper and ink usage.
- Make printed web pages more readable by removing ads, widgets and other distractions.
- Fix broken pages that don’t print correctly.
- Enter the url of a page you wish to print.
- Edit the page until it contains only what you want to print.
- Print It! Only your modified page will be printed.
There really is nothing else to it. It’s so insanely easy that you won’t believe it. This is the most effective way to get things done when it comes to printing.
Want to embed this video on your own site, blog, or forum? Use this code or download the video:
Stop wasting your time trying to fix computer issues over the phone or the Internet. Use GoToAssist to connect to the other person's machine remotely. GoToAssist's computer-to-computer connection is the fastest way available to help you get things done when there just aren't enough hours in the day.





2 Comments
DogReader
October 8th, 2008
at 2:18pm
Chris Pirillo On Community-Created Content… Have You Ever Wanted a Network or Wireless Scanner? How Do You Open Files on Your iPhone? Have You Ever Wanted to Create Your Own 3D Game for Free?How Do You Save on Printing Costs?
allen roberts
October 8th, 2008
at 1:55pm
I liked your suggestion. I will definately use it for printing song lyrics. I would like to suggest a cost saving technique i use when printing documents. I have a Dell system, and yeah, i used to be happy about that, until i found out they ship with lexmark printers with Dell logos. Anyway, my printer hasn’t been too bad. But it did something very annoying. It slathered the ink on the page quite thickly for normal text printings. Through experiementation, i learned that you could get the ink to come out less thickly by setting the paper type, manually, to card stock. Card stock is not very absorbent, as you know, therefore the printer cuts back on how much ink it spurts out of the heads. I use this setting for normal paper, and not only does it save ink, ( i get 50% or more pages from a cartridge ) it also prints crisper, and more elegantly. You also have to set the output to photo or normal. I use photo, because my lexmark printer actually leaves wiggles and misaligned letters in its wake on the other settings. I suspect it was designed to do this, as the photo printing has been exceptional.
You had a quote i liked in a discussion about windows vista, ‘the truth about windows vista’, that i really liked and that made me think how it could be applied to other situations in life. I think you are a very good writer. Anyway, I will leave you with your quote and this: Have a nice day. :)
“Without veneer, underlying code will never have a chance to shine.” My take on it: “Without gloss, the skills are not appreciated.”