

#Kodak 2170 printer software for mac Pc
The only two PC data connections are a USB socket at the back and a wireless link, which can be set up by entering a passcode or via WPS setup. We would expect something a bit more lavish on a machine at this price. The printer’s LCD display is disappointingly small at just 38mm, but is just about big enough to show worthwhile thumbnails, as well as menu choices.

To the right are start and stop buttons for scanning and copying and finally a power button and illuminated Wi-Fi indicator. To the right of these is a four-way ring of navigation controls and then a numeric pad for the built-in fax facilities. The layout of controls is logical enough, with a column of four mode buttons on the left. The control panel has a metallic sheen and is set at a fixed angle to the front.

The output tray pulls out from the front of the machine, giving a much straighter paper path than the front-feeding designs of earlier ESPs. The paper support slides up from the back of the device to support up to 150 sheets of plain paper or 40 photo blanks. The scanner has a 25-sheet Automatic Document Feeder (ADF) with a horizontal feed tray, so it doesn’t add a lot to the printer’s height. It all looks a bit cheap and cheerful, but is likely to be hard wearing. The case is largely made from coarsely textured black plastic, with chamfered ends and a single Kodak-yellow flash set into the front lip of the scanner lid. The ESP Office 2170 is designed as a SOHO device, for those who are as interested in printing pages as they are printing photos. Kodak has a new, simpler print engine, which we first saw in the ESP C110 and which the company is beginning to build into equivalents for most of its range of all-in-ones.
