• Main Forum
  • Buy Empties Cartridges
  • Sell Empties Cartridges
  • Buy/Sell New Toner And Inks
  • Printer/Copiers/ Parts
  • Industry News
  • Friday, 11 January 2013

                               T o n e r N e w s . C o m(11-01-13)

    R.J. Young Buys Preferred Computers  

    RJ Young Co. of Nashville has bought Preferred Computers, a Chattanooga information technology services provider and reseller of computer network hardware and software.
    The six Preferred Computers workers will join the 456 employees of the RJ Young, a copier and office products distributer.
    Preferred Computers employees will service customers in the region under its name at the RJ Young office and distribution center in at Bonny Oaks Office Park....Read More

    HP to Cut 200 Jobs in Rio Rancho New Mexico   

    RIO RANCHO, N.M. - A New Mexico business was greeted with tax breaks and news conferences touting how many well-paying jobs they were bringing with them.
    Now, Hewlett Packard is doing what so many other big companies have done after coming to New Mexico amid fanfare, they are letting workers go.
    When HP announced it was coming to Rio rancho five years ago, the computer company said it would eventually have 1,800 workers here...Read More  

    Malaysia : Man From Singapore Busted For Counterfeit Toner  

    BUSTED: Singaporean uses HP packaging to hoodwink buyers
    KUALA LUMPUR: POLICE busted an international syndicate that had been raking in millions of ringgit by supplying fake Hewlett Packard printer ink to the Middle East and African countries with the arrest of a Singaporean here on Tuesday.
    Federal Commercial Crime Department director Datuk Syed Ismail Syed Azizan said police made their move following information from HP representatives in the United States.
    "HP made a statutory declaration (SD) on the case and we launched our investigation after receiving the SD," Syed Ismail said...Read More

    On the Trail of a Counterfeiter Called ‘The Printer’ 

    A few counterfeit artists still engrave metal plates and search for soft paper that approximates the government’s proprietary blend. Others soak money in a chemical soup, rubbing off ink to create $100 bills out of fives.
    But in more than two-thirds of all cases, criminals manipulate scanners, printers and toner ink to create money where once there was none.
    Heath J. Kellogg, 36, whom the United States attorney’s office here described as a self-taught graphic artist, is in the latter category....Read More