[. . . ] HP LaserJet M1522 MFP Series User Guide HP LaserJet M1522 MFP Series User Guide Copyright and License © 2008 Copyright Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L. P. Reproduction, adaptation, or translation without prior written permission is prohibited, except as allowed under the copyright laws. The only warranties for HP products and services are set forth in the express warranty statements accompanying such products and services. Nothing herein should be construed as constituting an additional warranty. [. . . ] CAUTION: To prevent damage to the product, do not use an original that contains correction tape, correction fluid, paper clips, or staples. Also, do not load photographs, small originals, or fragile originals into the ADF. Insert the top-end of the stack of originals into the ADF input tray, with the media stack face-up and the first page to be copied on top of the stack. If the media is longer than Letter- or A4-sized paper, pull out the ADF input tray extension to support the media. 114 Chapter 10 Fax ENWW 2. Slide the stack into the ADF until it does not move any farther. Document loaded appears on the control-panel display. Adjust the media guides until they are snug against the media. 4. Use the alphanumeric buttons on the control panel to dial the number. -orIf the fax number you are calling has been assigned to a one-touch key, press that key. -orIf the fax number you are calling has a speed dial or group-dial entry, press Phone Book, use the alphanumeric buttons to specify the speed dial or group-dial entry, and then press OK. 5. On the control panel, press Start Fax. Lift the flatbed scanner cover. ENWW Use fax 115 3. Place the original document face-down on the flatbed scanner with the upper-left corner of the document at the corner indicated by the icon on the scanner. 4. -orIf the fax number you are calling has been assigned to a one-touch key, press that key. -orIf the fax number you are calling has a speed dial or group-dial entry, press Phone Book, use the alphanumeric buttons to specify the speed dial or group-dial entry, and then press OK. 6. On the control panel, press Start Fax. The control-panel display shows the following message: Send from glass?The control-panel display shows the following message: Load page: X Press OK, where X is the page number. After scanning the page, the product control-panel display shows the following message: Another page?If you have more pages to scan, press 1 to select Yes, and then repeat step 3 for each page of the fax job. -orIf you are finished, press 2 to select No, and then go to the next step. Fax a two-sided original To fax a two-sided document, use the scanner glass. See Fax from the flatbed scanner on page 115. Manual dial faxing Usually, the product dials after you press Start Fax. At times, however, you might want the product to dial each number as you press it. For example, if you are charging your fax call to a calling card, you might need to dial the fax number, wait for the acceptance tone of your telephone company, and then dial the calling card number. When dialing internationally, you might need to dial part of the number and then listen for dial tones before continuing to dial. 116 Chapter 10 Fax ENWW Dial manually with the automatic document feeder (ADF) 1. Load the document into the automatic document feeder (ADF) input tray. This allows you to wait for pauses, dial tones, international-access tones, or calling-card-acceptance tones before continuing to dial. The control-panel display shows the following message: Send from glass? [. . . ] Generally, more pixels per inch result in a higher resolution, more visible detail in the image, and a larger file size. printer driver A printer driver is a program that software programs use to gain access to a product's features. A printer driver translates a software program's formatting commands (such as page breaks and font selection) into a printer language (such as PostScript or PCL), and then sends the print file to the product. private branch exchange (PBX) A small telephone switching system that typically is used by large businesses or universities to connect all telephone extensions within the organization. [. . . ]