I bought this printer to replace a 10 year old Dymo 4xl that was having connection issues. I had a little trouble setting it up at first due to some lack luster instructions and a lack of any online trouble shooting support or FAQs. And I am pretty tech savy, so this was just unclear unstructions on their part. But I did wind up figuring it out on my own.
Initially I was impressed with the print quality, speed, and options available, but it quickly became very confusing trying to use different label sizes and shapes. The print drivers seem like your most generic direct thermal printer drivers, and not proprietary to HP at all. In fact to update them, you have to go to Seagull Scientific. This label printer isn't even found anywhere on HP's regular website. You have to go to an "HP Work Solutions" website which hosts some drivers (that aren't even the newest), quickstart guide, and manuals. But that's literally all they have on the site. No trouble shooting other than an LED color guide to decode what the blinking lights on the printer mean, which is made available by being able to download a PDF of the quick start guide that already came in the box with the printer. After that, figuring out what the settings in the very generic thermal print drivers do is up to you. And if you are new to thermal printers, or coming from something like a Dymo that is very user friendly, yet restrictive, good luck! Expect to waste a LOT of labels. Tip: If you do purchase this printer, update the drivers from the Seagul Scientific website. They are newer and solved a few issues I was having.
Don't get me wrong, the HP is better than my old Dymo because you can use non-proprietary label sizes. You COULD use off brand labels in the Dymo, but only if they were the same sizes as what was available to purchase from Dymo. But this is also where one thing made me decide to try another printer instead of the HP. I bought some Munbyn round clear labels, but the printer would not read them at all. It kept thinking the printer was empty. I really wanted to use these labels, but was about to send them back and just make due with white and colored labels. But due to the initial printer confusion and headache, something told me to try the equivalent 300dpi Munbyn printer that's over $100 cheaper first.
And that's why I'm leaving a 2 star review and will be returning this thing. Other than a very small difference in print quality of larger solid black shapes, the print quality on the $100 cheaper Munbyn is pretty similar to the HP, except the Munbyn seems to offer more adjustment for print quality and I can print the clear thermal labels. The setup was quicker because the instructions were clear and didn't skip an important piece of info and the printer was just easier to use right out of the box. While both companies have phone numbers for tech support, for something like a label printer, I shouldn't have to call a support line to get some very basic info. And Munbyn's website also has a whole Help Center for common issues and questions, along with help with print settings, AND an online label editor (which I have not tested as I don't need it). But HP doesn't even have any label software for this thing. The ONLY thing the HP does better is allows for finer adjustment intervals when it comes to aligning your graphic on the labels. The HP allows for 0.25mm intervals, while the Munbyn only allows for 1mm. I was able to bypass this by adjusting the alignment in Illustrator though.
So I'm not sure what you get for that extra $100+. I guess you are paying for the HP name, which dosen't mean much if the printer comes with generic non-HP print drivers, no software, and the experience using the product is barely as good as a lesser known brand. I expected more with HPs name on it, but this thing feels like no one put any thought into it and just slapped their colors and branding on someone else's label printer.