Talk:Brother Industries/Archives/2013

Links to this article
Do the entries that link here mean to link here? Mathiastck 18:37, 22 August 2006 (UTC)


 * Today, here's what links to the article:
 * Brother, Worlds Prefered Printers
 * Typewriter
 * Laser printer
 * Brother (disambiguation)
 * List of Japanese companies
 * Multifunction printer
 * CAPTCHA
 * Cobi
 * Smith Corona
 * Multi-Function Center
 * Devicescape Software
 * Brother Industries, Ltd. (redirect page)
 * Dot matrix printer
 * Centronics
 * Aichi Prefecture
 * Portal:Computer/List of computer companies
 * User:Atlant/Articles I've created
 * Brother (company) (redirect page)


 * At a quick glance, they all look likely to me; which one worries you?


 * Atlant 19:19, 22 August 2006 (UTC)

"Controversy with printers"
Rewrote this section for neutral tone as "Printer behavior".

Personally, I'd prefer that a printer stop printing when an ink well goes dry so paper isn't being wasted on poor quality prints. However, I could see this being a problem where one wanted a black and white print and the loss of a color well kept the print from being made.— Nahum Reduta &#91;talk&#124;contribs&#93; 01:36, 13 November 2009 (UTC)

Printer issue
Removing the printer issue section as it not only seems to be particularly critical in regard to the certain behavior of a particular type of produce, but also because the sourcing seems to be from a journal/blog rather than a verifiable source. 75.64.145.120 (talk) 23:46, 30 March 2010 (UTC)

Brother Subsidiaries
Brother has many subsidiary companies that have their own history. This article seems to mention several of the historical highlights from the UK, but seems to omit many of the highlights of the other subsidiaries. In Japan, for example, a Brother subsidiary is one of the largest manufacturers of Karaoke machines. The US subsidiary has a long history of sponsorships, including automobile racing, the Olympics, and the television show "Project Runway". The search for "Brother International Corporation (U.S.A.)" redirects to here, but there is little to no mention of this particular subsidiary in this article, which is misleading. While I believe it would hurt the article to list ALL of Brother's subsidiaries (there are many), I believe it would be less confusing to mention the subsidiaries with the greatest amount of history. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 205.134.47.30 (talk) 21:13, 9 October 2013 (UTC)