Lexmark printers are not the fastest or the prettiest, but they are probably the cheapest on the market - and the company just seems to try so hard.
The 3200 is one of Lexmark's more valiant efforts. It looks much the same as any other inkjet - paper feeds through the top and comes out of the bottom into a rather flimsy-looking but functional tray.
The machine runs on any Windows PC and the set-up is as easy and hassle-free as with any printer I have tested.
Lexmark makes two interesting claims - first, that its printers can handle the thin paper used on the mainland; second, that its ink is waterproof.
Sceptical about the second claim, I ran out a page of black text on plain paper and soaked the page under the bathroom tap.
Believe it or not, Lexmark was telling the truth. Some ink flaked off and the water turned dull grey, but the words did not run. After the paper dried, a few words had bled slightly, but were perfectly legible.