Automation of finishing at drupa 2000 versus hybrid production systems at drupa 2016
Digital printing demands in-line finishing
The rise of Printing on Demand in 2000 meant that the last part of the printing production process received more attention from the manufacturers, and not just the traditional manufacturers. Press builders such as Heidelberg and GOS also developed finishing systems or went into business with the traditional manufacturers. Out of a pure need, because developing software connections between presses and finishing systems is even more complex than actually doing it manually. Cooperation was also needed in connecting workflow systems. From Web2Print, digital prepress to management information systems have to communicate together for an optimized automation. At drupa 2000 we saw the first steps of this, stimulated also by the standards such as Adobe Portable Job Format. There was still a long way to go to completely automated workflow systems, as we will see at drupa 2016 from manufacturers such as EFI, Agfa, HP, Heidelberg and Fuji. Not just those though, as you will see in the DIP pavilion.
drupa 2016: 1024 finishing stands
At drupa 2016 there are a whopping 1024 stand for finishing solutions. Most will show automated systems, from guillotine lines to complete book production lines. Impressive will also be the connection between direct mail and industrial print solutions from manufacturers such as Kern and Domino. Cost price, speed and peak capacity for DM are optimised through automisation. Automisation also takes care that Big Data are correctly transformed into print productions where printing and finishing are being used to seduce consumers into buying.
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