

Expect to see higher-end printers from the e-All-in-One series launch in the next few months including the $149 Plus e-All-in-One with 3.5-inch display (worldwide in August), $199 Premium e-All-in-One with 4.3-inch display (worldwide in September), and $299 Premium Fax All-in-One (worldwide in September) with, you guessed it, integrated fax. Sorry, no fax in this all-in-one but it is PC and Mac compatible and will work with Google's forthcoming Cloud Print service when Google sets it free in the fall. It also prints directly off the web or via USB and SD / MemoryStick Duo cards if that's your thing.

Scans are captured at resolutions up to 1,200 dpi (optical). The $99 802.11n WiFi inkjet features a 2.36-inch touchscreen and prints at a rate of up to 29 ppm black (at up to 600 dpi) and up to 23 ppm color (at up to 4800 x 1200 dpi on photo paper). So there must be something really special about HP's Photosmart e-All-in-One D110a, right? Indeed, it's the first of a new line of web-connected printers from HP to feature ePrint, the ability to email messages with attachments (Microsoft Office documents, PDFs and JPEG image files to name a few) to the printer from any device including smartphones and tablets - no driver or app required.

With the imminent release of the iPad this weekend, the burning question I want answered is: will the iPad be able to print When I say print, I mean at the system level, not the application level as it is on the iPhone. Forget about Flash, multitasking and front or rear facing cameras. We don't cover many printers on Engadget because, frankly, they're boring. Tags: ePrint for iPhone, iPad, iPad printing, iPhone.
