An incoming telephone line can be plugged into an RJ-11 jack for faxes, and a second RJ-11 jack lets you daisy chain additional phones through the unit. You connect a PC or Mac to the CM1312nfi using either its USB 2.0 port or Ethernet jack, both located at the rear. The CM1312nfi uses one black and three color (cyan, yellow, magenta) cartridges. The four toner-ink cartridges arrive pre-installed in their own tray. Setup is literally a snap-you snap the keypad bezel onto the unit’s face, snap in the automatic document feeder tray and paper input tray. At just over 50 pounds, the machine weighs about ten pounds more than a comparable multi-function inkjet. Still, the unit maintains a modest 17-inch footprint. Like most multi-function printers, the CM1312nfi looks a bit like someone welded a flatbed scanner onto a printer. Here’s hoping you only have to do it once. Getting to the product inside involves more effort and puzzle solving than it should. The good news is that the CM1312nfi’s weakest feature is the box it comes in. The HP CM1312nfi, which sells for an impressive $499, certainly puts the “multi” in multi-function – including a flatbed scanner enhanced with an automatic document feeder, Ethernet networking, fax line and a built-in memory card reader for photo printing without a PC.
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