But if you wish to save $$$ by avoiding having to buy a RIP, then you might wish to get Hellmuth's insights on which printers can operate without a RIP.. but, what the printer manufacturer does not tell you.. if you avoid a RIP, what kinds of printing are not supported until you indeed obtain a RIP. Now perhaps you can see why readers prefer first to consult with an experienced institute such as FLAAR.

RIP´s for Hewlett-Packard large format DesignJet inkjet printers

We recently tested the HP 5000ps and its nice UV pigmented inks. Great color gamut but it took 20 minutes per 100 MB of file size for the ps to RIP the files. Thus a 300 MB photo took over an hour to RIP. In the year 2002 there was no excuse for that since there are plenty of after-market software RIP´s that RIP-on-the-fly. Printing starts in about 11 seconds if you know what RIP to select. Thus although we still recommend the HP 5000 for photo-realistic and fine art printing, but be sure to get an after-market RIP if you need speed.

If you wish up to 6 free FLAAR First Level Reports, fill out the inquiry-survey form, let us know what kind of printing you are interested in, specify what printers you wish to know about, and we will respond with the appropriate information.

Where can you get PosterJet RIP? We recently found their US tech support and the new company in California that will handle PosterJet nationwide (PosterJet itself is made in England).

More than 70 different brands of RIP software exist. Of these brands, about 15 companies went bankrupt or otherwise dropped out of the market. Even venerable Adobe stopped making RIPs over three years ago. So FLAAR has spent several years at the university researching the leading RIPs that have survived. You do not want to buy a RIP and then have the company go belly up, or simply drop the RIP, stop offering upgrades, and abandoning tech support. To help end-users Dr Hellmuth has prepared an entire series of tips, help, and information. His graduate student assistants have tested, evaluated, and compared Wasatch, Scanvec-Amiable, PosterShop, PosterJet, HP's ps RIP, and even the new RIP from Canon.

Software RIP vs hardware RIP?

My first RIP was an EFI Fiery RIP kindly sent to my Digital Imaging Technology Center by EFI (to use to evaluate and review an Encad NovaJetPro, this was about 5 years ago). This was very clever of EFI to send this RIP outright because this RIP is still fully functional and will probably never stop working. There is virtually nothing that could possibly go wrong with it. This is because there is not much inside the attractive case besides air.

Hardware RIP is simply a separate box, actually a computer, and actually a cheap low-MHz PC (though not labeled as such, but it usually has an outdated Pentium processor inside). This is called a hardware RIP because EFI (Electronics for Imaging) has already loaded the software into the computer hardware for you. So you never see any software, indeed the box has no CD slot. It is a dedicated RIP, dedicated solely to the (usually one) computer that it is made to coordinate with.

We have experience with four hardware RIPs. All our experiences are reported personally by Nicholas in his informative series on RIPs.

But more important, Disadvantages of hardware RIP.

A reader writes:
' I was lucky to use the Fiery as a test, we didn't pay for it before we got rid of it, it was very slow and fiddly to set up. It gave no better results than the (printer's own) driver for RGB images.'

As of March 2001 EFI (Electronics for Imaging) has finally abandoned its attempt to foist its hardware RIP on people. Only with the Canon BJ-W9000 and possibly will EFI continue it's dead-end hardware policy. Too many users have learned that hardware RIP offers few benefits. So now Electronics for Imaging offers a software version for the new Epson 10000 and Epson 10000CF (EFI Fiery Spark Software RIP). Downside is that we were told the new EFI Fiery RIP is still zero-upgrade path and can't work on any other printer. We will need to learn more about these aspects to be sure, plus whether you get any of the countless necessary options that all other software RIP´s offer. Thus there was no special reason to use any EFI RIP if other RIP´s are better, faster, and offer smooth upgrade path.

Can all RIP´s handle 6 color inkjet printers? If you have an Encad or HP printer they use the standard 4 colors CMYK and most RIP´s should work just fine. But the Epson, ColorSpan, Roland and many Mutoh and other printers use six colors. Many older RIP´s cannot handle all six colors. Of course the new versions of the better RIP´s are coming out with six-color capability. Thus PosterJet, a full-featured RIP for large format printers, will have six-color support in its upcoming version.

What about printers with 8 colors? or 12 colors such as the ColorSpan? FLAAR has two ColorSpan printers, the DisplayMaker XII and the Mach 12. Thus we have plenty of reports on these printers and the RIPs which run them.

Can you RIP from a Macintosh?

This question is covered thoroughly in the FLAAR report series.

Do you absolutely have to buy the RIP that is recommended by the wide format printer company?

Yes and no. Yes in the sense that, hopefully, the wide format printer company will have selected the RIP which is really the best for their printer (as opposed to selecting the RIP that gives them the most profit). The only known case that I would personally suggest considering an alternative RIP is when the Amiable RIP is bundled with a printer such as early Roland's and the economy model of Encad. That Scanvec-Amiable RIP comes with the printer. Such on-board RIPs usually imply a lite version, a polite way of saying that most of the features of a full-strength RIP are disabled.

Same with RIPs featured or favored by HP. If they are bundled with the printer they tend to be lite. HP offers the EFI Fiery RIP with its Hewlett-Packard DesignJet 2800CP and 3800CP. Encad used to offer a comparable EFI Fiery RIP with its Encad printers. Epson offers an EFI Fiery RIP with the Epson 9000. Canon also offers the EFI Fiery RIP. That is primarily due to the profit margin not because this is a better RIP. It is easier, quicker, and hence more profitable for the printer companies and hence their sales reps to work with just one single RIP. That way they can install it quickly.

What is really inside a 'hardware RIP?'

Out of curiosity one day I opened up my nice Fiery RIP. Other than a the Fiery controller, the insides of the earlier hardware RIP´s was mainly empty space. That's right, mainly air, the same air that fills the space inside any normal computer. What is in the 'hardware' that makes a hardware RIP superior? It doesn't even have a usable monitor, just a dinky little LCD mini-screen. The primary hardware inside is an elderly Pentium or comparable chip, probably a generation or so passe, a hard disk (must unlikely a Seagate Cheetah, in other words, just a cheap generic hard drive), a small bit of RAM (my old computer has 800 MB and my new G4 has 1.5 GB RAM. Even my laptop probably has more RAM than a hardware RIP). So please, what is such a big deal about hardware RIP? Anything that is in the hardware can be done perfectly well, and often better, with software.

It's the same with scanners. Scanner hardware is mostly just standard generic electronics, a cheap plastic lens, and perhaps mirrors. It is the software that makes one scanner better than another (such as Scitex and LinoColor at the high-end and SilverFast at midrange). SilverFast scanner software is so good that it can turn a cheap scanner such as an Epson into a rather sophisticated challenger to a more costly Umax.

The hardware RIP I had in 1997 was totally and completely obsolete two years later; the manufacturer told me it couldn't even run another brand of large format printer. I must admit, that the slick logo and racing-car design of the hardware RIP sure looked nice in my office. Also, it was easy to use, actually I never had to do anything else but plug it in on Day One, and never had to fiddle with it for the next three years. Why should I need to? There were so few capabilities and no upgrade path there was not that much to learn about it. It faithfully ran the aging Encad NovaJetPro, and still runs it quiet well, about as obsolete as the 300 dpi this system is capable of.

RIP´s for desktop laser printers.

If you need a good software to enhance your Hewlett-Packard desktop laser printers the best are from InfoWave, especially if you have to connect a Macintosh to the cheaper HP laser printers (which only work with a Mac if you use InfoWave PowerPrint). InfoWave products are now part of Strydent Software. They offer PowerPrint Mobile Edition, PowerPrint 5.0, and PowerPrint for Networks.

Efi Fiery Rip Software

Last updated: Jan. 16, 2004
Previous updates: Sept. 24, 2003, Jan. 15, 2003, May. 17, 2002, Aug. 14, 2002.
EFI™ has launched the newest platform for its industry-leading Fiery® digital front ends (DFE) for digital printing systems. The latest advancements included in the new EFI Fiery FS200 Pro extend technical leadership advantage that makes Fiery the world's most popular production DFE technology by giving users an extremely productive, intuitive platform with expanded colour capability.
The DFE platform, which will be incorporated in several new digital presses from EFI partners starting next month, features innovative tools for higher-speed processing and expansion to CMYK+ colours. It also provides robust capabilities for shop automation and connectivity. As the industry's only CIP4-certified JDF DFE, the Fiery platform can seamlessly connect with other JDF-based devices. Plus, users can establish fully automated, bi-directional communication and integration with EFI's market-leading MIS/ERP and web-to-print products.
'Fiery is the gold standard for the class of digital front end technology needed to drive high-end, integrated graphic arts production printing environments, and we are excited to take our leading-edge technology to the next level with a platform that addresses users' critical needs for faster processing, more-efficient printing and expanded colour gamuts,' said Toby Weiss, senior vice president and general manager, EFI Fiery. 'Many of the new capabilities included in this release are unique to Fiery and will deliver a competitive advantage to print businesses looking to fuel their success with the unmatched performance this DFE platform offers.'
Improved productivity with 55% faster RIPing
Fiery FS200 Pro also expands EFI's breakthrough Fiery HyperRIP offering, which is powered by EFI's proprietary ASIC (application specific integrated circuit) with RIPChip™ technology. As a result, Fiery DFEs can process print files significantly faster than alternative DFEs.
HyperRIP now has a mode optimised for multiple jobs, as well as the previous, single-job mode, boosting processing performance up to 55% compared to the performance without HyperRIP. Now, the Fiery FS200 Pro platform can RIP up to four jobs simultaneously, giving users the ability to print more jobs in the shortest possible time.
The new Fiery platform also includes a Rush RIP mode that opens up a fifth RIP to process rush jobs when all four main parallel processors are busy. 'Rush RIP allows printing operations to accommodate last-minute rush jobs without interrupting the on-going workflow or cancelling jobs that are already being processed. It also gives users the ability to preview jobs quickly while other jobs are processing, further speeding up the production process and increasing overall throughput,' said Weiss.
'With the new Fiery FS200 Pro platform, EFI has brought a new level of productivity to the market,' according to Kaspar Roos, director of analyst firm InfoTrends' Production Workflow Service. Samsung scanner app for mac dpi. 'Improvements in ripping speed, colour management, and tighter integration of workflow components make this new Fiery platform a very attractive proposition.'
Better brand-colour matching, and customisable API integration
The EFI Fiery FS200 Pro system also takes colour management to brand-new heights with the introduction of a CMYK+ feature set for incorporating expanded-gamut process-colour imaging beyond standard four-color imaging. CMYK+ opens the door to a range of inkjet press technologies that may be capable of incorporating five-, six-, or eight-colour process imaging. Print businesses can more precisely match a wider range of brand colours on digital presses offering expanded toner imaging capabilities.
EFI has also released colour correction and process control improvements to the Fiery Graphic Arts Package, Premium Edition including:
• new features in Fiery ImageViewer that offer greater consistency in the colour workflow, with automated colour adjustment between similar jobs using custom colour curves
• a WYSIWYG interface to edit control bars, offering users more control over placement and content.
The first DFEs based on the Fiery FS200 Pro platform will be available in Q3.

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Epson Rip Software

Fiery is the world's most popular DFE platform, with more users than all other production printing DFEs combined. For more information about Fiery Driven™ production printing, visit www.efi.com