Digital Printing-Production Inkjet - Continuous Feed (Color)

HP Inc. and KBA Unveil 110 Inch-Wide Inkjet Web Press to Converters, Journalists
December 4, 2015 at 12:36 pm

The world’s first HP PageWide Web Press T1100S was jointly presented by HP Inc. and KBA this week, to almost 200 international packaging printers and trade journalists at the KBA headquarters in Würzburg, Germany. The gigantic inkjet web press with a web width of 2.80m (110 inches) was developed in under two years by HP Inc. and KBA-Digital & Web Solutions in close cooperation. It opens up new opportunities in terms of the flexible production of corrugated packaging in various formats and run sizes with digital pre-print liners.

Canon Marks 10th Anniversary of Future Authors Project with Latest Published Book
November 18, 2015 at 10:44 am

Canon Solutions America has unveiled its tenth published book, "Words," written by student participants of the Future Authors Project, a uniquely beneficial program for young aspiring writers offered through a public-private partnership between Canon Solutions America and the School District of Palm Beach County, Florida. To commemorate the tenth year of the Future Authors Project, middle and high school students gathered for an inspiring evening that included select readings from some of the newly published authors.

HP Showcases PageWide Web Press HD in Corvallis, Oregon
October 15, 2015 at 11:17 am

Earlier this month, HP invited a group of customers and prospects to its Corvallis, Oregon, facility to show them the latest developments in the newly renamed PageWide web press (formerly known as the Inkjet web press) product line. The facility tour began with a visit to HP’s Corvallis "Fab" lab, the fabrication laboratory where the silicon wafers used in inkjet print heads are made using micro electro mechanical system (MEMS) manufacturing techniques.

Leveraging Kodak Flexo Technology to Print Touch-Screen Sensors
October 12, 2015 at 8:30 am

In a huge manufacturing building in the Eastman Business Park in Rochester, New York, Kodak is printing sensors that can be used in touch screens for tablets, computer screens, kiosks, and industrial equipment. The process uses technologies that print service providers will find familiar, but they are being used to achieve a very different end result.