PrinterLogic is an Enterprise Printer Management solution from the company of the same name in Saint George, for server-less remote site printer deployments. Boasting more than 1,500 customers in over 120 countries, PrinterLogic enables organizations of all sizes to eliminate print servers. PrinterLogic’s integrated printer management platform is an on-premise web application designed to simplify the management, migration, and deployment of printers.
We love Apple air print, but it is limited in its ability, and that you have to have the printer on a Wi-Fi network with the mobile device, and it only works with Apple devices. PaperCut is great also but I believe it's cost to benefit ratio simply were outmatched by what …
We didn't investigate other vendors for this at all. We seen a PrinterLogic demo at an IT "convention" and realized it was affordable and did everything we needed and wanted, and MORE!
So we chose PrinterLogic based on a meeting with a rep at Microsoft ignite years ago. We also looked at a few others just for due diligence. Based on price, responsiveness and our demo we decided not to even evaluate another option. The setup was so simple and fast and pricing …
PrinterLogic had more features than the other options we looked at. Some of those options were not on the list. It was easier to use than the other products we looked at and it supported pretty much all major brands. The reporting features were also as good or better than …
PrinterLogic is truly Cloud based, PaperCut infrastructure is hosted on windows servers in the back end, which as proved with the recent hack, is vulnerable and is not what we wanted. PrinterLogic was one of the few companies that was truly cloud based and aligned with our …
We looked at multiple others similar software like Printix, PaperCut, and Microsoft Universal Printing and while they all worked fine, we went with PrinterLogic because it was easier to use over-all, required less drastic changes to our environment, and was by far the most cost …
Printix and universal print, not options in the drop down, but have tried them. Universal print really missed the mark with billing per print job and being way to expensive. Printix was just terrible to manage.
They function similarly although I did not test Papercuts cloud version. I trialed PaperCut more for their on premise version because it would be a one time cost instead of an ongoing fee. Still, we decided to remain with printerLogic as it is provided through an agreement with …
PrinterLogic offers a superior printing solution compared to PaperCut due to its comprehensive feature set and ease of use. While both platforms facilitate print management, PrinterLogic stands out with its centralized printer deployment, eliminating the need for print servers. …
Printerlogic was recommended by our network administrator and was the only option we explored. It seemed like the right solution for us so we began the evaluation process immediately and determined that it would suit our needs. They were flexible with our timing as we needed a …
I might compare PrinterLogic with Microsoft Universal Print (New Commerce Experience). PrinterLogic is a more in-depth product and offers more features.
PrinterLogic is far easier to use on the web interface, and is more compatible overall. We love the Map tool which lets our users see where the printers are throughout all of our locations with ease.
We attempted to utilize Microsoft's universal print cloud solution but found many issues with core functionality and architecture. Microsoft universal cloud print solution had limitations on administration, driver usage, as well as a cost per page printed. PrinterLogic resolved …
We liked PrinterLogic the best because it seemed easy to use, was cost-competitive, and had a way (although not great) to remove old printers that were installed from the print server. From what I remember in the demos, the user interface and setup seemed easier than some …
we had PaperCut and it doesnt really have the ability to go totally in the cloud. Also one of the main reasons we switched is because no matter what we did, the PaperCut service would randomly stop working and we would get daily calls about it on the helpdesk.