HP has also drank this Kool-Aid and is using chip detection for "genuine" HP toner cartridges. ![]() Proving once again, there a subreddit for EVERYTHING (or there will be!). THIS is the exact discussion I've been looking for. Kudos to the OP here and everyone else participating in this discussion. I am always in proximity to the printer so I know when it's running low (old school style!?!). My questions are:ġ) What's the difference between RFID or NFC?Ģ) How easy/hard would it be to read/write (edit) the "chip" on the fly weekend you change labels?ģ) Am I wrong to think editing to say there's "999" labels on a roll or whatever would be a quick & dirty fix for the count aspect? Label type itself would be different. So I have a bit of a tech background (about 4 years of data communications + ~30 years of IT experience), I tried last month and have a little time to play now. ![]() As I understand it, "green" labeled boxes = "Automatic Label Recognition" (RFID/NFC) compatible. One site forum said if you had any old "blue" labeled Dymo boxes that Dymo would cheerfully exchange them for newer "green" labeled boxes. Tons of stuff via Google bitching about it (Dymo's brilliant idea) but no remotely viable solutions until I read this. ![]() I had no idea they had instituted "Automatic Label Recognition" crapola. I had a Dymo 400 that crapped out after years of reliable use. Guys, I can't thank you enough for this very valuable info!
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