Just to the side of the control panel is a USB port, designed for walk up printing of documents from USB drives. A 2-line by 16-character LCD display sits behind the controls and three small indicators – for Ready, Data and Attention, are set above the surface of the printer, to be seen from across an office. On the right is a well laid-out control panel, with a ring of menu controls around an ‘OK’ button and two, large coloured buttons for Stop and Go. The top surface is slightly sloped towards the front with an indent forming the paper output tray allowing for substantial print jobs to fall into its well. It’s a neat, square-cut machine, coloured in Kyocera Mita’s usual cream and black and with a modest footprint for a machine in this class. The FS-1350DN sits nearer the bottom end, but is still quick and expandable, certainly in terms of paper handling. Kyocera makes a lot of good laser printers, from SOHO single-function devices through to departmental multifunction machines with all the trimmings.
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