HP Puts Its Printers In The CloudHP Puts Its Printers In The Cloud

Most of the company's printers are Web-enabled, cloud-aware, and have an email address so they can receive printing jobs from any device any where.

information Staff, Contributor

July 13, 2011

4 Min Read
information logo in a gray background | information

Top 20 Enterprise Laser Printers

Top 20 Enterprise Laser Printers


Slideshow: Top 20 Enterprise Laser Printers (click image for larger view and for slideshow)

The way users access, create, store, and consume content is changing. And the Imaging and Printing Group (IPG) at HP has kept a sharp eye on this transformation over the years. The group is now responding by introducing a new range of Web-enabled printers and managed printing services, for which it sees a $292 billion market opportunity by 2013. Currently, there is a market for three million units in India, and HP has 55% market share; it leads in the large format category with 90% market share.

Using internal studies, the IPG identified four key trends:

First, there is a content explosion; digital content is growing 10-fold every year and the number of printable documents is increasing by a factor of 3x.

Second, mobile devices like smart phones and tablets are becoming the preferred devices for accessing the Web; HP IPG predicts that by 2013, 26 billion incremental pages will be printed from mobile devices and 85% of smart phone users will want to print.

Third, content such as photos, newspapers, magazines, documents are moving from analog to digital; over 200 billion pages are moving to digital every year.

And fourth, the industry and consumers are moving from a device- or hardware-centric model to service-based business models. HP IPG predicts that the opportunity for managed printing services will grow from $18 billion in 2010 to $25 billion by 2013. Retailing publishing services will soar from $5 billion in 2010 to $12 billion by 2013.

In this scenario, workers and consumers would need to print from any device, at any location, on-demand. Responding to this transformation HP IPG believes the printer needs to be "Web-enabled" and "cloud-aware."

Speaking at a press conference in New Delhi on July 7, Vyomesh Joshi, executive vice president of HP IPG, said, "We decided that above a certain price point, every printer will be connected to the Web. It will be cloud-aware, and it will have an email address. So if I take a picture on my smart phone, I can send the picture to the email address of that printer, it goes to the cloud and gets printed."

In a short demo, Joshi printed documents on his smart phone and on Google Docs to a printer on stage, wirelessly, via the cloud. This was done in a few minutes via a service called ePrint. To do this one has first register their HP Web-enabled printer (support for ePrint) at the ePrint center. The printer will then be assigned a unique email address. And to print documents one has to simply send it to the printer's email address.

Speaking to information Indiaafter the press conference, Neeraj Sharma, vice president of HP IPG India said, "We have been shipping printers with the ePrint function since the past one year. These printers cost Rs 8,000 [around $180] onwards. Apart from AirPrint [wireless printing from Apple devices] we've got ePrint even in enterprises. Wireless printing will complement printing from wired devices."

When asked about the security aspects, Sharma said the ePrint Center (HP's cloud printing service) allows you to define people who will be able to use your printer. Sharma also informed that much of the innovation on ePrint was done at HP's R&D labs in India.

"We want to focus beyond the metros, in places where there is faster urbanization happening. We see a lot of potential for this service in the education sector in these [tier-2 and tier-3 cities]," said Sharma.

Read the rest of this article on information India.

See the latest IT solutions at Interop New York. Learn to leverage business technology innovations--including cloud, virtualization, security, mobility, and data center advances--that cut costs, increase productivity, and drive business value. Save 25% on Flex and Conference Passes or get a Free Expo Pass with code CPFHNY25. It happens in New York City, Oct. 3-7, 2011. Register now.

Read more about:

20112011
Never Miss a Beat: Get a snapshot of the issues affecting the IT industry straight to your inbox.

You May Also Like


More Insights