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Canon Jet Products and Supplies
With current Canon jet ink printing machines the printhead element is separate from the printer and the jet cartridges are separate from the printhead element. This is the best of all possible (cartridge) worlds. The cartridges being separate from the printhead element, they are simply jet ink storage tanks, easily replaceable with new compatible or genuine original jet cartridges. As the printhead element is removable from the printing machine, it is easily cleaned. Our cleaning kit for Canon can do wonders in restoring the printhead element's output and performance.
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Search by Printer
Please select the model of your jet printer, copier or fax from
the menu. |
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Search by Cartridge
Please select the part number of your jet cartridge from the
menu. |
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Canon Paper
& Media
Please select the type of paper or media from the menu. |
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Please use one of the search
options above to find the jet products that you need. If you would
prefer to see a full-page listing of all the Canon jet cartridges
or jet ink printing machines that we support, please use the links below.
| Most of the early documents of Roman and Greek civilizations were written on papyrus, material obtained from a plant growing along the banks and on the Delta of the River Nile. The word ‘paper’ derives from ‘papyrus’. Papyrus was used, stored (and delivered) in rolls. The Latin word for ‘roll’ is ‘volumen’ from which we have derived the modern word ‘volume’. When they did not have papyrus readily available, the Romans used the inner part of the bark of a tree called ‘liber’, from which the word ‘library’ is derived.
Eventually papyrus was imported into Rome from Egypt and replaced ‘liber’ or clay tablets as a writing medium. Until Julius Caesar, writings on papyrus would be stored (and read) in rolls. But rolls are not as easily readable as pages. According to the Latin historian Svetonius (who wrote ‘The Life of the 12 Caesars’) Julius Caesar was the first to fold the papyrus into pages for more efficient use and readability – probably in connections with his military expeditions. The most famous of his conquest was Gallia (France) and the war inspired him to write his most famous work ‘De Bello Gallico’. |
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