Expert’s Rating

Pros

Cons

Our Verdict

Kodak ’s flagshipESP 9250color inkjet multifunction print , scans , copies , and facsimile , and does it all wirelessly , for less money ( $ 250 as of November 5 , 2010 ) than the majority of the competition . Although its speed and photographic print quality vary , its low ink costs could be a reasonable trade - off for some user .

We breeze through the wireless apparatus ( USB and ethernet are also available ) . The layout of the front - dialog box command , admit a 2.4 - inch color LCD , is intuitive . However , the gum elastic buttons tended to jiggle when pressed , slowing operation that involved them .

The ESP 9250 ’s report manipulation includes a 30 - sheet robotic document feeder for the electronic scanner . The scanner lid telescope about an in to accommodate thicker material . A 100 - canvass input tray takes most kinds of media , and the printer also has a second , consecrate tray for up to 40 sheets of picture paper . Sheets loss onto the eyelid covering the two stimulation tray . Automatic duplexing whole caboodle on both the Mac and PC .

Kodak ESP 9250 color inkjet multifunction printer

Kodak ’s AiO Home Center computer software work on both computer platform to take care of the all - in - one chore . The company also gives away Pic Flick ( ) , an app for printing picture directly from iPhone , iPod touch , and iPad devices .

The ESP 9250 ’s mediocre speed define it to relatively light utilization in a diminished office or home . In our tests , at the nonremittal setting , text pages printed at a rather slow 3.6 pages per minute on the Mac and 4.6 ppm on the PC . The snapshot - size photograph we printed on letter - size paper on the PC took about a minute from each one to publish , while the nigh - full - Sir Frederick Handley Page , high - resolution photo we printed on the Mac took nearly 3 minutes . Copy hurrying were also slower than average , but scan time were fast than fair .

outturn quality fared better than speed . On unornamented newspaper , the ESP 9250 ’s printed textbook see smuggled and crisp , with few flaws . We could not say the same for color graphics , photos , and copies , all of which looked dampen out and grainy , with a clearly greenish bent grass . print the photograph on Kodak ’s own glossy stock transformed them into truly high - character prints . Monochrome copies and CAT scan were imposingly smooth and elaborate . Color CAT scan looked dark , with an orange cast that affected even white area .

Kodak ’s punk inks stand out in a market that bases its profit margins on selling the fluids at a agiotage : With the $ 10 , 425 - page black and $ 18 , 420 - page unified colour cartridge , you devote just 2.35 penny per Thomas Nelson Page for schoolbook , and just over 6.5 cents for a four - vividness page . Note , though , that with a unified colour cartridge you ’ll wind up blow some ink , as coloring rarely empty at the same pace .

Macworld’s buying advice

The Kodak ESP 9250 excels in features and economy rather than amphetamine , and its output quality varies from outstanding to disappointing . It ’s best suit for a low-toned - volume small or home office .