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Rick RiznerThe Business Inkjet 1100 series printers are intended for high-capacity use--as ink jets go--and for easy attachment to your office network. We tested the 1100d model, which costs $199 and offers networking as a $199 option. If you want to connect the printer to your network right out of the box, the 1100dtn is a much better value: It costs just $299, and you get a second input tray that boosts total capacity to 400 sheets. Both models sport an internal duplexer for two-sided printing. Another feature that qualifies the 1100d as a business printer is its oversize ink tanks: Each $34 tank yields approximately 1750 pages (according to the vendor), making the per-page expense less than 2 cents per page for black text. In our print samples, text looked solidly black and sharp overall, but slightly blobby on curves; coated ink jet paper didn't improve text quality significantly. The 1100d printed gray- scale photos surprisingly well, with good detail and attractive textures; color photos on glossy paper looked good but captured less detail than we'd like. The 1100d printed color graphics very quickly, tying the speedy Epson C84 as the second-fastest ink jet we've tested. For a business printer, $199 (and $299 for the networked model) is an attractive price. Hewlett-Packard sells other business-oriented ink jet printers that print faster and, in some cases, take wide-format paper--but a network-ready ink jet printer with automatic duplexing costs at least $1099. Similarly equipped color laser printers start at about $1000 these days.