My printer has 5 colors: pigment black, and the rest are dye. You must not use pigment when dye is required.
By the way, I once got a mislabeled bottle from RJetTek. It was dye labeled as pigment, so a harmless mistake in this case.
Yes, Mr. Hat, rubbing it in, of course.
PeterBJ, you probably know that a lot of colored foods are acid-base indicators. Red cabbage does that, of course, and you can see the effect when you are washing dishes. As I recall, cranberry (tranebær) juice does that. I think I have also seen it in...
You must have a router that you control. The router will list the devices that are connected, with IP addresses, and either names or MAC addresses. There's no need to add yet one more flaky program to your computer.
But I doubt that you are done, since the IP address will probably change in...
For what it's worth, I changed my DNS server right away to Google (8.8.8.8), and I've had no trouble since. I have no idea whether that's what fixed it, however.
Possibly something to do with this?
https://nakedsecurity.sophos.com/2016/02/22/worlds-biggest-linux-distro-infected-with-malware/
http://blog.linuxmint.com/?p=3001
Maybe coincidence, but something was going around...
Yeah, except POW is hidden in Forum Announcements and Feedback. I can never find it there.
This one is one of a numbered series. Do I look for the unnumbered one or #3? They overlap in time, you know.
The top "sponge" is not hydrophobic, by the way. They both soaked up ink in GHWellsjr's experiments. Reportedly, one sponge just has a smaller pore size than the other. And Canon does deliver some cartridges with the upper sponge almost filled.
I wouldn't leave too much conditioning solution...
I used to use InkTec for HP, and it was good. I suggest also that you contact WebSnail on this forum (I forget his company name), or Precision Colors in Canada. They will have what you need.