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Design firm dares to reinvent the printer

By | September 27, 2011, 7:09 AM PDT

Can anyone improve the lowly computer printer?

In recent years, printer manufacturers have added various features, from memory card readers to wireless network connectivity, in an attempt to bring a technology firmly set in the 20th century into the 21st. But few have been able to re-imagine the peripheral for the age of tablets and touchscreens.

That lack of innovation or interest got the Seattle design firm Artefact thinking. The company, which worked on the user experience on Research in Motion’s BlackBerry PlayBook, saw an opportunity to reconsider the printer because, well, no one else was.

“That’s always a good reason to look at a category and reimagine what it could be,” said Jonas Buck, a designer at Artefact.

Buck has come up with a printer concept that’s unlike any out there. Dubbed SWYP for “See What You Print,” the matte black device features a touch screen interface that seamlessly connects to cameras, computers, phones, and tablets. Once connected, the screen shows the various photos and documents on the device that can be printed and that users can tap to select.

Users can then select the image or document and crop and edit it with their fingers. And when the image or document appears the way a user wants, a simple swipe downward prints the page.

While Artefact has created the concept based on existing technology, it’s not a working prototype. The firm has no intention of manufacturing the product. Rather, it wants to show its design chops, as well as prod the printer industry to rethink its approach to product innovation.

“There are so many companies stuck in this space throwing on more and more features,” said Fernd van Engelen, Artefact’s director of design, who worked with Buck on the SWYP.

The goal was to take a familiar device and overhaul the user experience to be “simple” and “delightful,” said Rob Girling, co-founder and principal of Artefact.

“Our primary goal with SWYP was not to take a concept to market,” Girling said, “Although we’re finding out that daring to rethink even the most mundane products opens up business doors that could lead to commercializing ideas.”

SWYP: See What You Print from Artefact on Vimeo.

This post originally appeared on CNET’s Business Tech blog.

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Jay Greene

About Jay Greene

Jay Greene is a contributing writer.

Jay Greene

Jay Greene
Jay Greene is the author of the book, Design Is How It Works: How the Smartest Companies Turn Products into Icons. He is also a senior writer at CNET, covering Microsoft, Google and Yahoo. Previously, he was BusinessWeek's Seattle bureau chief and a reporter for The Seattle Times.

Jay Greene

Jay Greene
Jay Greene has nothing to disclose.
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19
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+1 Vote
+ -
I love it. . .
and I want one ! But I want an iPad first. But the printer probably costs MORE than an iPad.
Posted by mike_flood
27th Sep
+3 Votes
+ -
Love it
The printer will be $79, but replacement ink will run $354,000 over the 5 year lifespan of the printer.
Posted by bb_apptix
27th Sep
+2 Votes
+ -
Love it!!!
Whoa! Wait a minute, no where in the description of this pritnter did I see a cost of ink, are these comments on cost of ink just a joke? Please tell me it is...LOL! I LOVE the idea and would purchase one in a moment. Does it connect to a scanner? Tell me more>
Posted by mcsan1942
27th Sep
+1 Vote
+ -
Great Idea...
Great concept. Freeing the PC or computer or laptop from the printing process.... Too bad you don't mention the INK. Ink on printers is like service on cell phones.... They practically give the cell phone away at a very very low price, but they stick it to you with the expensive service, and you are stuck with the 2 year contract. INK is so expensive they purposely ship new printers with a "sample" cartridge.
Analogy: Imagine I go buy a NEW car and they give it to me with "sample" tires that last only 10 or 20 miles. I then have to go back to the dealer or to a tire store and pay over $120(installed) per "real" tire.... Ouch! that hurt. End of analogy.
Posted by asotelo@...
27th Sep
+1 Vote
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Ink
Your leg is being pulled. The technology has nothing to do with ink, but with the user interface. It's very cool as far as I can see, and I would be the first in line to buy it, even before the previously mentioned iPad (grin).
Posted by dachba
27th Sep
+1 Vote
+ -
Invent - reinvent is more accurate.
Essentially I have accomplished the same process on my laptop and wireless printer for years, but with far greater editing ability. It's just adapted , re-shaped, at best re-invented and redundant technology - not to mention redundant equipment.

As far as "design chops" - not seeing that either. Repackaging others technology is no more "design chops" than it is inventing. Oh, sorry I forgot. This is Smart Planet where every paying company's PR is "real news." Move over News Corp.
Posted by dduggerbiocepts
27th Sep
+3 Votes
+ -
Overspecialized...
Is this really that innovative, or that cool? Pasting a capacitive resistence screen onto a printer with some limited composition/assembly of the photograph?

The design shown makes this a PHOTO printer. Thus, the design is illustrating overspecialization, not innovation and not really freeing onself from a PC. What is this going to do (this sort of design) for me vis-a-vis other printing? Not much. It looks cool on a video, but I think for this sort of thing HP has the right idea in their wireless printers that play well with iPad and other tablets and with wireless devices and computers.

Yes, the user experience is "simple and delightful" for one and only one type of specialized task...

What would be more simple and delightful is a user interface on the printer that allowed true interupting of a print job when you realize the wrong huge file is being printed and you are wasting your toner/ink/paper, or the ability to interupt a print job and change to double sided and resume/restart. Things like that right from the printer.

This sort of innovation leads to a home office with ten different printers. Yes, for a limited few this is worthy, but really...I could see someone making a docking station for an iPad/smart phone/other device, the software/interface is the same for all who dock ... but personalized.
Posted by StanislavF
27th Sep
+1 Vote
+ -
great printer concept
This might just be the thing of the future if they can keep the Secret Service guys from stopping the development. Just think what a crook could do with a hundred dollar bill with it.
Posted by jimmied43
27th Sep
+1 Vote
+ -
stupid idea
Look...My computer is over here, and my printer is over -*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*->THERE!
Do I want to get up from my computer every time I want to print something? Sure, the printer can access you phone or camera directly...but you know what? So can my computer! And I'm already sitting at my computer! So, load from the camera to my computer and from there, print! Then on my way out of my computer room, I'll pick up my printouts! And contrary to their mantra, I firmly believe in "if it ain't broke, don't fix it!"
Posted by tech_ed@...
27th Sep
+1 Vote
+ -
Cute idea, but far from what we need or use
If there's any new growing market in the printing world, its has to be the e-printer with multifunction capabilities such as scan, print, fax - and all from anywhere you're at. This is a cute idea but it can only do one thing. What's gained by doing everything on the printer instead of just doing it on our computer screen like we are now? Perhaps a new way of editing a photo, it's all the missing features that makes this a flop. Great idea that has a lot of room to grow.
Posted by bobinmo1
28th Sep
+1 Vote
+ -
How about...
INSTEAD of this hardware, just make it an ipad app that communicates with ANY printer. Then you get the sexy without the added investment in hardware... --FathomStudio.com (clearly, even more brilliant than Artefact)
Posted by Jason Smith
30th Sep
+1 Vote
+ -
Nice Idea
If you want to have a portable printer that doesn't need to be plugged into a computer to use it. I get that these guys/gals are just playing around with ideas, but if one is going to work on printers why not address a problem with the current crop. How about working on an idea to prevent paper mis-feeds and jams. It seems like every printer I have ever had has problems with paper feed.
Posted by mlavoie1956@...
30th Sep
+1 Vote
+ -
New stuff?
Oh boy and hot diggity! Just what I've alway never needed.
Good concept, I suppose.
Posted by hey_you
30th Sep
+1 Vote
+ -
User Interface from a different viewpoint
Other contributors to this thread have made some good observations on the merits of this device. Here are some of my preliminary observations and questions.

Having a SWYP device with a nice graphical interface that allows the user to input a photo, for example, from another device and to edit it before printing may not be that useful. Even if you save the "edited" file on the SWYP device. Do you save the "unedited" photo file on the SWYP device as well for another re-edit? Can you re-edit an edited SWYP file?

Regardless, once you edit a photo and print it on the SWYP device, you need to be able to allow another device to gain access to the file so it can be sent, for example, via email or further edited by more powerful software. Although, I think if a user has the more powerful software, they will just use it instead. Can any other device a user owns access the SWYP to copy the "edited" or original file? What kind of file format is the "edited" SWYP file?

I would need some more technical details, and answers to the above questions, to see if it has much promise.
Posted by frankhill
Updated - 30th Sep
+1 Vote
+ -
A good start.
I like it. This semi-useful model would have to be for the Apple crowd though - you know - those who spend 2 grand on a glossy white 'Herman Miller' Instant Message/Facebook machine.

Some of these approaches would also function well in the working world - after some additions.
Posted by mybunkaccount@...
Updated - 30th Sep
+1 Vote
+ -
Concept, But...
Would it actually hold enough paper to be even marginally useable? The footprint seems overly large when it is flopped open. But the biggest problem as I see it is 'various photos and documents on the device'. Who is going to trust their security to a printer? Is there any security to trust? Why would I want to store anything on a printer anyway? I'll bet that my twin high-resolution LCD monitors have better characteristics than their hypothetical display so why would I want to edit on the printer? Besides, I know that my trackball is more controllable than a finger.
Posted by zdnet@...
3rd Oct
+1 Vote
+ -
Quite nice .... but why not just make an App and any printer?
Me thinks almost any major printer manf could crank out this app and add the drivers for its printers behind it.
Posted by ksweere
21st Oct
0 Votes
+ -
Good Thinking
a good approach to catch the market
Posted by ragh1981
4th Mar
0 Votes
+ -
nice idea
this really a good approach i agree with you. ..
Posted by lackneramanda
Updated - 14th Apr
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