HP

HP unveils eight Print 2.0 systems

Print 2.0 strategy behind government and education projects

Written by Matt Chapman in New York

HP has introduced eight imaging and printing systems for enterprise customers which tap into specific needs in the higher education, public sector, retail and financial services industries.

These include a card security system for printers in the US Department of Defense that meets Presidential Directive 13 from Homeland Security, and a tracking system for financial firms that complies with Securities and Exchange Commission rule 17a.

John Tomesco, vice president of global enterprise market development at HP, said that the Department of Defense uses the access card system for staff entering the building.

"This is linked to a certificate, so you can swipe or enter your card into a multi-function printer, enter a Pin for the public key infrastructure that will validate you as a user and also validate the applications you can have access to," he said.

"Basically it is a very sophisticated level of authentication that was required in the public sector around Presidential Directive 12."

Tomeso explained that the document capture system was designed for brokerage or capital markets that needed to be compliant with Securities and Exchange Commission rule 17a.

"Any communication that takes place between the broker and a customer needs to have the ability to be tracked and traced, whether it is a fax, email or actual document," he said. "There has to be an audit trail so we developed a system for that."

Other products include four systems designed for education campuses, adding mobile printing, document capture, controlled cost printing and controlled access points.

HP has also developed a print system for retail outlets based on their marketing needs.

"Our retail marketing automation application was developed specifically for the output in a retail environment, whether it be shelf labels, in-store flyers that go out to the customer or any kind of promotional material," Tomesco said.

The device allows retailers to decide whether they need to print marketing documents centrally and distribute them to their stores or actually print it in the stores themselves.

"When you consider that some of the retailers may have 1,000 stores with different price zones and different ethnic backgrounds it becomes an issue," said Tomesco.

"If you want to turn over promotion cycles very quickly this becomes a tool that helps reduce waste, reduce cost, increase the effectiveness of your promotions and increase revenue."

HP has also developed the SP400 handheld scanner and printer that can print directly onto packaging.

The device has wireless capabilities to send scanned information back to a computer or upload new information to be printed on packaging.

However, Tomesco said that the new systems are only a small part of what is currently being developed by HP.

"Besides the eight we have announced today there are probably another 20 in the pipeline at various stages of development," he said.

Tags:

reader comments

related articles

HP

HP taps Web 2.0 for Print 2.0

'New era for printing' borrows Web 2.0's clothes 01 Jun 2007

 

HP admits to fear of user reviews

Email addresses checked to make sure competitors don't post 01 Jun 2007

HP to revamp e-commerce site

More multimedia to wash away the manufacturer image 01 Jun 2007

Dell to slash 8,000 jobs

Rebuilding effort to cost 10 per cent of its workforce 01 Jun 2007

HP unveils personal shopping assistant

Instore kiosks to offer personalised retail specials 30 May 2007

HP focuses on EMEA print markets

New products target finance, public sector and retail 14 Feb 2008

Motorola points to DPM to lessen WEEE burden

Industry-wide adoption of DPM posited as way to assist channel comply with WEEE 16 Nov 2007

eCopy simplifies document capture

Now supports wider range of scanners and MFDs 12 Mar 2008

related whitepapers

today's top stories

Body Shop rolls out PCI system

Retailer hopes to benefit from improved customer data analysis 07 Oct 2008

Where to offshore (and why not here?)

Tholons, the research firm founded by well-known offshoring guru Avinash Vashistha , has just published some new research in Global Services magazine... 07 Oct 2008

The future of Ethernet

Where is Ethernet going? We look at the future of the widely-used networking technology. 07 Oct 2008

The pIT stop Q&A: How can I measure the business success of IT applications?

Ou expert panel answers readers' real-life IT questions 07 Oct 2008

National Identity Fraud Prevention Week

Every Monday seems to mark the beginning of a new awareness drive and this week’s theme has particular importance to small businesses... 06 Oct 2008

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Jobs

Related jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

VPN, Extranet and Intranet Solutions

WAN/ LAN Solutions

Network Security

Interoperability-Connectivity

Grid/ Utility Computing

Latest poll

Would you apply for a job that was advertised on Facebook or a similar social networking site?

Would you apply for a job that was advertised on Facebook or a similar social networking site?

The government is using Facebook to recruit IT staff - would you apply to such an ad?

Previous poll results

Latest audio and video articles

Ethernet cableVideo

The future of Ethernet

Where is Ethernet going? We look at the future of the widely-used networking technology. 07 Oct 2008

Podcast imageAudio

Computing podcast - Next-generation broadband Britain; and we report from Gartner's IT security summit

In our latest podcast, we discuss the hurdles that a national fibre-optic network must overcome, and look at the issues discussed at the recent IT security conference 02 Oct 2008

Latest in-depth articles

Features

How to ensure progress in programming

Best practice advice from Forrester Research 02 Oct 2008

BT workersAnalysis

Wanted: a viable model for fibre

While other European countries are pressing ahead with fibre rollouts, progress in the UK is being held back as the debate over who will foot the bill drags on, writes Dave Bailey 02 Oct 2008

Advertisement

Primary Navigation