Digital printing,
automation to drive
drupa '08
By Mary L. Van Meter
Publisher
DUSSELDORF,
Germany — With more than 550 million newspapers printed worldwide each day, the
power of the printed word remains strong, said officials at a weeklong event
held last month to promote drupa 2008.
Newspapers are just one
segment of the millions of tons of printed materials produced each year, said
Albrecht Bolza-Schunemann, chairman of drupa 2008 and chief executive officer of
Koenig & Bauer AG.
Bolza-Schunemann
said contemporary newspapers have little to fear in comparison to Web sites,
particularly since users still rate papers as friendlier and easier to read.
“Consumers rate nothing as highly as newspapers in terms of credibility,” he
said. Still, he said integrated workflow and process control will become more
critical factors as publishers find ways to cut production costs. “Automation
will be a key factor,” he said.


Albrecht
Bolza-Schunemann, chairman of drupa 2008 and chief executive officer of Koenig &
Bauer AG, touted the power of print at the January drupa preview.
Photos: Newspapers &
Technology
The global volume of printed
materials, he said, is increasing at an annual clip of 3 percent to 5 percent.
In more populous nations such as China and India, print growth is galloping
along at double-digit rates, he said.
Bolza-Schunemann, along with
drupa CEO Werner Matthias Dornscheidt, kicked off drupa Media Week. This year’s
drupa, from May 29 through June 11, will showcase more than 1,800 exhibitors.
Among the key technologies
drupa visitors can expect to see are those related to digital printing, along
with an increased focus on automated and touchless workflow solutions, vendors
said.
Companies such as Screen,
Kodak, Ricoh, Fujifilm Corp. and Xerox Corp. said they’ll demonstrate hybrid
applications based on the nexus of digital and offset technology.
These print-on-demand and
Web-to-print approaches are geared to helping printers expand margins and
attract new revenue streams.
Among drupa developments:
•Domino Printing Sciences said
it would release two newspaper-oriented inkjet-based variable-print products,
the K150 inkjet printer and version 4.5 of the vendor’s Bitjet printing system.
Both enable high-speed inline inkjet printing and both can be integrated with
web offset and flexo presslines.
•Screen previewed the
TruePress Jet 520, a full-color variable printing system, as well as the
PlateRite 2000+ thermal computer-to-plate system.
The TruePress can print
different images and text on each page and features a roll-fed paper transport
system, according to Tim Taylor, marketing director (see photo, page 24). Taylor
said the system can be used with any uncoated newspaper stock and will be aimed
at newspapers that want to produce print editions at remote sites.
“CTP represents 90 percent of
Screen gross revenues and we are very committed to this market,” Taylor said.
“But because Drupa only comes around every four years, we will devote a majority
of our booth to print-on-demand to showcase that we are in the market.”
The 2000+, meantime, can
produce 106 broadsheet or 49 panorama plates per hour and is Screen’s fastest
machine. It’s available immediately.
•Ricoh showcased its Ricoh Pro
C900 and C900s digital printer. Designed for high-volume print customers, it is
integrated with a range of inline finishing devices that support perfect
binding, ring binding and other capabilities.
•Presstek Inc. said it will
display its chemistry-free platemaking systems, its line of 52DI and 34DI
digital printers and its Momentum Pro workflow software.
The 52DI is a landscape
digital offset press that can support FM screening without additional time or
expense, Presstek said. The 34DI is a portrait format digital press.
•Fujifilm and Xerox said they
would cross-promote each other’s digital printing capabilities as part of their
reseller agreement. Among specific products to be displayed will be Fujifilm’s
Brilla HD Pro-V chemistry-free digital plate and PressMax pressroom chemistry.
•Kodak said it will
demonstrate its next-generation digital inkjet press, Kodak Stream Concept
Press.
The high-speed press features
print resolution that exceeds 600 dots per inch and relies on continuous inkjet
technology. Kodak said Stream will be geared to commercial printers that produce
monthly page volumes of 10 million or more.
“Stream Technology will bring
some exciting changes to the industry and this technology demonstration will be
an impressive display of its offset class capabilities,” said Ronen Cohen, vice
president of marketing of Kodak’s inkjet printing solutions.
Additionally, Kodak will
display Prinergy 5.0 workflow software and other CTP systems and associated
software geared to commercial printers. —NT
Editor’s note: Newspapers &
Technology is one of only seven U.S. publications to be selected as a drupa 2008
media partner and the only one whose primary focus is newspaper production.