Will the invention of reusable printing paper spell the end for traditional ink? What about ‘traditional’ printers (I mean the company type, not the hardware type)? In fact Xerox’s ‘invention’ isn’t really even that.
The new reusable paper however, wasn’t invented to replace real paper in everyday life. It was meant to replace that paper which is kept internal in companies, the paper documents you print out and then throw out within one day. As Treehugger puts it so aptly:
Almost half of the paper used in American offices is for daily use. It is for display, not storage and, at the end of the day, it’s in the trash can. All of the energy that was put into harvesting, processing, and shipping that paper was, in the end, for less than a day’s use.
That’s a lot of paper.
A bit on the ‘new’ invention: the reusable paper actually fades after 24 hours, allowing it to be printed on again. It might be useful for other applications of course, secret documents anyone? As Gizmodo also points out – there are those conmen and nefarious characters that might use this for contracts that simply fade away.
All in all the invention of reusable printing paper isn’t going to sound the death knell for professional printing firms, it’s just going to lessen the amount of paper large companies use if they choose to adopt it. It could make for an interesting line of products in the future where vinyl is impregnated with inks (like photographic film is), the printer applies heat to thermoset the ink into place, and voila printed vinyl without the need for solvents.
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