The Star Malaysia - Star2

Print directly from your smartphone

The options for printing from your phone run the gamut, from integrated printing features right on your device, to third-party printer apps and Cloud services provided by printer makers.

- By BERNADETTE WINTER

NOBODY wants to boot up their computer just to quickly print a document or photo from their smartphone.

That’s why Apple and Google have integrated a printing feature into their mobile operating systems – Airprint in the case of IOS and Cloud Print for Android.

The advantage: Print jobs can be sent to the printer from any app via Wifi.

The disadvanta­ge: The printer must support the respective standard.

“If it doesn’t, nothing will come out of the paper chute,” says Rainer Schuldt of the German-language magazine Computer Bild.

If the printer and the mobile device are on the same network, Airprint will automatica­lly display the printer.

Then all you have to do is select it and start printing. The data doesn’t leave the local network, according to Rudolf Opitz from c’t, another magazine.

Google’s Cloud Print requires you to install an app on your Android smartphone.

That makes it possible to use printers via Wifi. However, Google has announced that it plans to switch off this service at the end of 2020. There are still alternativ­es to print from a smartphone, including apps from printer manufactur­ers.

The disadvanta­ge: “Usually the document to be printed must first be sent to the printer app before it can be sent to the printer,” Schuldt explains.

While that works quite well for documents stored on the phone or in Cloud storage, printing from the browser usually doesn’t work.

Compared to Airprint on iphones, printer manufactur­er apps offer the advantage of additional settings, such as print quality.

There are also third-party apps that work with many different printer manufactur­ers.

“Unlike the apps from printer manufactur­ers, these apps are often not free of charge,” Opitz says.

Plug-in apps are another way of printing via smartphone or tablet. These are developed by both printer manufactur­ers and third-party providers. They’re generally free, don’t have their own user interface and can be installed via the app stores.

When you connect to the printer, you transmit the paper size, colour, and the desired print quality. “They generally use cloud services for processing, but most plug-ins point this out beforehand,” says Opitz.

If the document is something you want to keep secure, he advises against using apps that prepare the print data on Internet servers.

Another Android solution is the Mopria (Mobile Printing Alliance) plug-in app. The app is the result of an industry organisati­on founded in 2013 by the companies Canon, HP, Samsung and Xerox.

Since then, all the well-known printer manufactur­ers have joined, along with Adobe, Microsoft and chip manufactur­er Qualcomm.

“It has set itself the goal of standardis­ing printing from mobile devices,” Opitz says.

But what about print quality? “It can happen that the manufactur­er’s plug-in prints better than the Mopria or vice versa,” Opitz says. He recommends trying it out to see.

In addition, many printer manufactur­ers offer their own Cloud services.

The printer gets an email address, to which users can send anything they want to print. If the printer is switched on and online, users can even get it to print while they’re out and about. –

 ?? —dpa ?? There are third-party apps that work with printers from many different manufactur­ers.
—dpa There are third-party apps that work with printers from many different manufactur­ers.

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