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There’s a huge HP printer sale at Best Buy: The best deals
Looking to upgrade your home office setup with a great printer? Now’s the perfect time. Best Buy’s limited-time HP printer sale is serving up great prices on some of the brand’s best. With discounts of up to $160 off a wide range of printers, you can bring home a printer worthy of the sleekest home office.
The Best Buy sale includes all-in-one printers, photo printers, and high-speed office printers. If you’ve already handled other basics, like your perfect desk chair, headphones, a keyboard, or even a standing desk, a printer is the next step.
Keep reading to check out our favorite deals from the Best Buy HP printer sale.
The best printer deals during the Best Buy printer sale
Whether you need hard copies of your tax return or you need to print your boarding pass for your next trip, a printer is always a great addition to your home office. Check out these great deals at Best Buy on some of HP’s best printers below.
HP LaserJet Pro MFP Wireless black-and-white all-in-one laser printer: $380 (34% off)
Just call this veritable productivity center the king of the office. The HP LaserJet Pro MFP all-in-one printer is super fast, secure, and essentially an office work superhero.
It has blazing fast print speeds and a 50-page auto feeder, so it can power through high-volume jobs effortlessly. It can also perform dual-sided scanning in a single pass to help you finish complex scanning tasks quickly.
But there’s more to this printer than that. HP Smart technology and shortcuts help to make tasks easier so you aren’t stuck navigating an endless maze of menu options. You can also enable print control from anywhere — including your phone or laptop.
Add in robust security settings, PIN/pull printing and centralized device management, and you’ve got yourself the perfect home office printer and then some.
If you’re still faxing people in 2024, there’s also an integrated fax feature in addition to the print, scan, copy, and other options on board. Hey, people do still use them, after all.
If printing quickly, accurately, and from anywhere in the world is important, this is one printer you should absolutely consider adding to your home office.
HP Smart Tank 6001 wireless all-in-one Supertank Inkjet Printer: $240 (35% off)
Tired of buying ink for your printer? This phenomenal deal nets you a great printer with up to two years’ worth of ink, ready to go when you are. On top of that, the HP Smart Tank 6001 printer is all about speed, value, and eco-friendly tech.
With print speeds up to 12ppm black and 7ppm color, plus auto two-sided printing, it can zip through any task quickly with deep blacks and crisp text. Plus, you get an ultra low cost-per-page, thanks to its high-capacity ink tank – it can print up to 8,000 color pages with the ink included. And if you need to refill, you can look forward to spill-free replenishment (and clean clothes).
With versatility from quality 4800 dpi prints to Bluetooth LE mobile printing, this workhorse has the performance and features to meet your every need.
Built-in security features like encryption and password protection keep documents safe, too. Plus, smart buttons make it easy to set up print jobs and keep them flowing.
If you’re someone who prints a lot of text regularly, or you’re just conscious about how much ink you tend to use, this is the printer for you.
HP Envy Inspire 7955e wireless all-in-one Inkjet photo printer: $160 (31% off)
Looking for a basic printer with some added perks? This all-in-one printer is your best bet, and it’s under $200 right now during the Best Buy HP printer sale.
It can handle whatever print job you throw at it, including photos. It can print, scan, copy and anything else you can think of, and it does all those things well.
Vibrant, true-to-life photo printing lets you turn digital memories into keepsake prints – plus, you can add customizable messages and print in different formats. With over 45% recycled plastic in its construction, you can feel good about printing all these physical things, too.
Built-in trays and an automatic document feeder allow seamless switching between documents and photos, so you don’t have to fight with the printer to figure out the best orientation for each job.
And Instant Ink delivery plus HP+ optimization ensure worry-free printing always ready when you are. So if you happen to run out of ink, like many of us often do, you don’t have to interrupt your workflow to run out and buy a cartridge – it will already have been delivered to your door. Plus, when you buy this printer, you get your first three months of an Instant Ink subscription for free.
If you don’t need the speed of a laser printer but also don’t want to get the most basic of printers, this is a good compromise that’s still a fantastic choice, especially when you can buy it on sale.
Other HP printers on sale
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Biden’s top hostage envoy Roger Carstens in Syria to ask for help in finding Austin Tice
Roger Carstens, the Biden administration’s top official for freeing Americans held overseas, on Friday arrived in Damascus, Syria, for a high-risk mission: making the first known face-to-face contact with the caretaker government and asking for help finding missing American journalist Austin Tice.
Tice was kidnapped in Syria 12 years ago during the civil war and brutal reign of now-deposed Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad. For years, U.S. officials have said they do not know with certainty whether Tice is still alive, where he is being held or by whom.
The State Department’s top diplomat for the Middle East, Barbara Leaf, assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern Affairs, accompanied Carstens to Damascus as a gesture of broader outreach to Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham, known as HTS, the rebel group that recently overthrew Assad’s regime and is emerging as a leading power.
Near East Senior Adviser Daniel Rubinstein was also with the delegation. They are the first American diplomats to visit Damascus in over a decade, according to a State Department spokesperson.
They plan to meet with HTS representatives to discuss transition principles endorsed by the U.S. and regional partners in Aqaba, Jordan, the spokesperson said. Secretary of State Antony Blinken traveled to Aqaba last week to meet with Middle East leaders and discuss the situation in Syria.
While finding and freeing Tice and other American citizens who disappeared under the Assad regime is the ultimate goal, U.S. officials are downplaying expectations of a breakthrough on this trip. Multiple sources told CBS News that Carstens and Leaf’s intent is to convey U.S. interests to senior HTS leaders, and learn anything they can about Tice.
Rubinstein will lead the U.S. diplomacy in Syria, engaging directly with the Syrian people and key parties in Syria, the State Department spokesperson added.
Diplomatic outreach to HTS comes in a volatile, war-torn region at an uncertain moment. Two sources even compared the potential danger to the expeditionary diplomacy practiced by the late U.S. Ambassador Christopher Stevens, who led outreach to rebels in Benghazi, Libya, in 2012 and was killed in a terrorist attack on a U.S. diplomatic compound and intelligence post.
U.S. special operations forces known as JSOC provided security for the delegation as they traveled by vehicle across the Jordanian border and on the road to Damascus. The convoy was given assurances by HTS that it would be granted safe passage while in Syria, but there remains a threat of attacks by other terrorist groups, including ISIS.
CBS News withheld publication of this story for security concerns at the State Department’s request.
Sending high-level American diplomats to Damascus represents a significant step in reopening U.S.-Syria relations following the fall of the Assad regime less than two weeks ago. Operations at the U.S. embassy in Damascus have been suspended since 2012, shortly after the Assad regime brutally repressed an uprising that became a 14-year civil war and spawned 13 million Syrians to flee the country in one of the largest humanitarian disasters in the world.
The U.S. formally designated HTS, which had ties to al Qaeda, as a foreign terrorist organization in 2018. Its leader, Mohammed al Jolani, was designated as a terrorist by the US in 2013 and prior to that served time in a US prison in Iraq.
Since toppling Assad, HTS has publicly signaled interest in a new more moderate trajectory. Al Jolani even shed his nom de guerre and now uses his legal name, Ahmed al-Sharaa.
U.S. sanctions on HTS linked to those terrorist designations complicate outreach somewhat, but they haven’t prevented American officials from making direct contact with HTS at the direction of President Biden. Blinken recently confirmed that U.S. officials were in touch with HTS representatives prior to Carstens and Leaf’s visit.
“We’ve heard positive statements coming from Mr. Jolani, the leader of HTS,” Blinken told Bloomberg News on Thursday. “But what everyone is focused on is what’s actually happening on the ground, what are they doing? Are they working to build a transition in Syria that brings everyone in?”
In that same interview, Blinken also seemed to dangle the possibility that the U.S. could help lift sanctions on HTS and its leader imposed by the United Nations, if HTS builds what he called an inclusive nonsectarian government and eventually holds elections. The Biden administration is not expected to lift the U.S. terrorist designation before the end of the president’s term on January 20th.
Pentagon spokesperson Pat Ryder disclosed Thursday that the U.S. currently has approximately 2,000 US troops inside of Syria as part of the mission to defeat ISIS, a far higher number than the 900 troops the Biden administration had previously acknowledged. There are at least five U.S. military bases in the north and south of the country.
The Biden administration is concerned that thousands of ISIS prisoners held at a camp known as al-Hol could be freed. It is currently guarded by the Syrian Democratic forces, Kurdish allies of the U.S. who are wary of the newly-powerful HTS. The situation on the ground is rapidly changing since Russia and Iran withdrew military support from the Assad regime, which has reset the balance of power. Turkey, which has been a sometimes problematic U.S. ally, has been a conduit to HTS and is emerging as a power broker.
A high-risk mission like this is unusual for the typically risk averse Biden administration, which has exercised consistently restrained diplomacy. Blinken approved Carstens and Leaf’s trip and relevant congressional leaders were briefed on it days ago.
“I think it’s important to have direct communication, it’s important to speak as clearly as possible, to listen, to make sure that we understand as best we can where they’re going and where they want to go,” Blinken said Thursday.
At a news conference in Moscow Thursday, Russian President Vladimir Putin said he had not yet met with Assad, who fled to Russia when his regime fell earlier this month. Putin added that he would ask Assad about Austin Tice when they do meet.
Tice, a Marine Corps veteran, worked for multiple news organizations including CBS News.
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Delivering Tomorrow: talabat’s Evolution in the Middle East
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