4 January 2008 11:00 GMT / By Stuart Miles
The X4550's big USP is the wireless connectivity, but what about its ability to offer decent prints? We get printing to find out how the X4550 performs.Before we look at the features offered by this printer, just consider why a Wi-Fi option might suit you. Homes and offices are increasingly wirelessly connected, so it makes sense to run all your hardware from that network.
With a printer, this means that unlike with wired options, and cable length restrictions, not only do you not need to have the hulking great thing sat right on your desk, but it can be used by more than one computer, or even laptops, without complicated connections and cabling.
The wireless connectivity in the X4550 comes via built-in 802.11g which is also compatible with 802.11b. This should cover most average consumer connections, although it is worth noting that the printer does also offer a USB hook up too.
Getting the printer connected to a wireless network is easy, thanks to Lexmark's idiot-proof easy-guided set up installation software, and the printer shows through its display, and handy flashing lights, if you have managed to get it talking to your Wi-Fi successfully.
Once set up, there's nothing different you need to do because the printer is wireless, it's still a matter, on a PC at least, once you've got it all connected, of selecting the printer in the same way you would a wired device, and sending print jobs to it in the same way.
Design-wise the X4550 will not offend with its white and brushed metal looks. The style is classic Lexmark with the top housing the scanner, an angled control panel with easy to understand buttons and a an LCD display, memory card slots (SD, MMC and CompactFlash) to the front right and paper trays to top and bottom.
The claim from Lexmark is that the X4550 is capable of producing up to 26 black pages per minute and 18 colour pages per minute. We can only assume this is via USB, rather than Wi-Fi connection, and on optimal settings, as it was frankly a bold claim considering the printer's actual performance. The X4550 is not fast, with colour printing obviously slower than monotone.
Photos can be printed up to a respectable 4800 x 1200dpi resolution which is more than fine for the kind of home snapshot printing that you'd expect from an all-in-one.
Photo printing is made easier with the addition of PictBridge, for cameras with that functionality, plus the inclusion of memory card slots that cover all the main options.
Bundled with the printer is Lexmark's Imaging Studio software that offers what you would expect - options to scan, crop rotate, resize, get rid of red-eye, etc.
The copying function can be done PC-free, using the device as a standalone copier, which is handy. The option to select up to 99 copies should suit even the most demanding home office users and the reduction/magnification option, from 25% to 400% is a nice touch on a cheaper machine.
The scanner element is a flatbed with a design that can handle (reasonably) large items such as books, the stats for this side of things are 48-bit colour scanner depth and 16-bit for grayscale. Results were fine, rather than amazing, for both text and images, which is really no more than what you'd expect from a multi-function device.
Verdict
We haven't thoroughly researched Lexmark's claim that it's the most affordable Wi-Fi-enabled all-in-one printer on the market today, but with online offers showing the price as low as £64, we'll give them the benefit of the doubt.
Overall, this printer's main selling point is the wireless functionality with its printing, scanning and copying skills being capable rather than amazing.
If you are going to use that aspect to its full advantage, and really benefit from the Wi-Fi features then it's a product we recommend.
If you're looking for a high perfomance all-in-one that excels at everything it does, then you might want to look elsewhere.
Score
Review Recap
- Made by
- Lexmark
- Price as reviewed
- £99
- The good
- Wi-Fi printing, affordable
- The bad
- Slow, large
- Quick verdict
- If you want to wirelessly network your home office, this is a great all-rounder printer option. If you don't, then there's better on the market
- Key specs
- Ethernet, USB, Wi-Fi
- Score
-
Recommended articles
Hardware, Printers, All-in-one printers, Lexmark, Wireless, Networking, Lexmark X4550




Acer CloudMobile Ice Cream Sandwich smartphone set for MWC launch 4.3-inch award winner
Best iPhone utilities apps Resistance is futilities?
BlackBerry Porsche Design P'9981 For the fast lane
Best iPhone productivity apps Speedy
Samsung Galaxy S III: Review of rumours, features, pictures and specs Thinner, faster, better
New HTC Ice Cream Sandwich device pictures leak Another one for the rumour pile...
iPad 3 launch event first week of March According to AllThingsD
LG Miracle picture and details leak Update: More pictures from the wild
Nokia 700 Sleek and desirable Nokia
HTC dates Ice Cream Sandwich update, Sensation models get it first End of March
Samsung O table is for the kitchen of the future Flexible hob
Google home entertainment device detailed WSJ solves device mystery
Tesla Model X SUV goes back to the future DeLorean lookalike announced
Apple iTV: Review of rumours, features, pictures and specs iT'S coming
More leaked iPad 3 parts help form bigger picture - including Sharp Retina display iPad 3, in kit form
Panasonic Lumix GX1 review
The one?
Sony PlayStation Vita review
Curriculum Vita
Nokia Lumia 710 review
WP7 on a budget
GoPro HD Hero2 review
Amazing things come in small packages
HTC Explorer review
A phone for people who make calls
BlackBerry Torch 9810 review
Middle of the road
Sony Alpha A65 review
Affordable SLT. But is it a DSLR-beater?
Fiat 500 TwinAir Plus review
Two-cylinder beast
BlackBerry Bold 9790 review
To boldly go where we've already been before
Motorola MotoACTV review
Just add exercise
Motorola Xoom 2 Media Edition review
Mini Xoom
Sennheiser IE80 review
Tune that bass
BlackBerry Porsche Design P'9981 review
For the fast lane
Kingston Wi-Drive review
Expand your storage
Huawei Ideos X3 review
Cheap but imperfect