Skip navigation

Gadget gets grandparents into e-mail sans PC

Reviewer: Grandpa resisted at first but liked receiving grandkid photos

Image: Tech Test-Presto
A Hewlett Packard Presto HP A10 Printing Mailbox appears with a color-printed page. The Presto, which has to be plugged into an outlet and an active phone jack and fed with an ink cartridge and plain white paper, functions as an e-mail program for people without computers.
Steven Senne / AP
  Tech Holiday Gift Guide  
  More
Holiday Retail
Online holiday shopping is trickier this year
For online holiday shopping this season, consider expanding your repertoire of retailers and bring your most comfy slippers. It’s going to be a more challenging effort this year than last .

Tech and gadgets videos
"Modern Warfare 2" not so modern?
The single player campaign is intense, the multiplayer is sleek, but the game stumbles in some key points. Video game reporter Todd Kenreck reviews the game.

Video
Tech Watch
The latest in technology and entertainment news.
  Auto Tech

A better economy may lure buyers, but these trends could seal the deal.

Go to Auto Tech

Review
By Brian Bergstein
updated 1:55 p.m. ET July 3, 2007

BOSTON - By offering technology that allows people without computers to read e-mail, Presto Services Inc. took on a bold challenge. Yet Presto and its Internet-connected printer that spits out the e-mails are remarkably well conceived.

I tested this service with my grandparents in California, ages 86 and 87, and thought of it as a dual experiment. While putting Presto through its paces, I wanted to see how people tuned to slower social rhythms felt about becoming more connected to today's constantly firing communications culture.

This is not a complete transformation, since Presto is one-way: Recipients get printed e-mails but have no keyboard or computer screen for responding. For that reason, my grandfather told me he didn't think he'd enjoy Presto.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

But it turned out that even being brought part way into the e-mail fold — which meant a steadier stream of photos of their three great-grandchildren — was elating. Ultimately, my grandfather delivered such an effusive verdict that I suspect even Presto would tone his comments down in an advertisement, for believability's sake.

So let's just put it this way: They liked it so much I'm going to pay Presto to keep them on as customers ($100 for the printer, $100 a year for the e-mail service).

Here's how it works. First someone orders Presto's color printer — likely someone on the Web-connected side of the equation, since this is available mainly online, at least for now. (It also can be ordered by phone.)

The "Printing Mailbox" printer is custom-made for Presto by Hewlett-Packard Co. It is simplified so it has a just a few buttons — including volume controls, since the printer chimes when it has delivered something.

It's pretty easy to get it going. The printer has to be plugged into an outlet and an active phone jack, and fed with the ink cartridge and plain white paper. (Twenty sheets are included.)


Resource guide