Situation: You’re going to install a Canon printer on a computer but you don’t have the driver CD for it. So, like anyone else, you go to Canon’s web site to download them. This should be an easy painless process, right?
Wrong.
Here’s what you have to do to download drivers for a consumer-grade Canon printer:
- Go to www.canon.com
- Click "Support" on the left (in the gray)
- Choose your region from the map
- Choose your landing site (e.g. Canon U.S.A.).
- Another window or tab will open at this point.
- Choose "Drivers & Downloads" from the left gray area.
- Select your category as "Consumer Products".
- Another window or tab will open at this point.
- Next to 1, select category as "Printers".
- Next to 2, select your series of printer.
- Next to 3, select your model of printer.
- Then click the almost unreadable gray "GO" button below that. AND FINALLY.. you’ll get to the drivers you need to download.
This is absolutely ridiculous I have to jump thru this many hoops just to get a STUPID DRIVER SET.
How easy are the others?
For HP printers:
- Go to www.hp.com
- Click "Support & Drivers" from the top.
- Choose "Download drivers and software (and firmware)"
- Enter the model of your HP printer and click "Go"
- Download drivers
And that’s it.
For Lexmark printers:
- Go to www.lexmark.com
- Hover over "DRIVERS & DOWNLOADS" from the top and click "Driver Finder"
- Type in the model of your printer
- Click "SEARCH"
- Select your operating system.
- Click red "DOWNLOAD NOW" button.
And that’s it.
My personal score for each
HP
Score: Good
If you own an HP printer, the drivers are easy to get, the text they use on their support site is readable and easy to understand and you don’t feel like you’re getting lost at any time.
Lexmark
Score: Somewhat crappy
Light gray tiny text on white background = HARD TO READ. In fact, almost the whole site is in itty-bitty text with not enough contrast. Is this a nit-pick? Hardly. A support site should NOT have hard-to-read text anywhere.
Tip: When using Lexmark’s support site, increase the size in your browser by using Control-Plus. When done, reset back to normal with Control-0 (that’s a zero).
Canon
Score: Satan-spawned crappiness of doom
It is so easy to get lost in their support site it’s not even funny. Tiny text is everywhere and it’s not obvious where to click to get what you’re looking for (whereas it should be).
Case in point: After you selected your landing page, did you know you could also click on "Product Search"? Of course you didn’t. Want to know why? It’s not underlined or even a color that even remotely resembles a link.
Canon’s support site is a big steaming pile of you-know-what. To navigate it is a nightmare.
If you have a Canon printer and need drivers.. or heck.. even if you don’t need drivers I’d go get them now while it’s fresh in your mind from reading this article – because I guarantee you’ll forget how to do it later. Who could remember all that crap?
My suggestion for all printer manufacturers
There should be a big obvious search box right on the home page that says "Enter your model here to search for drivers". It should be that obvious because I can guarantee the vast majority of your web traffic is for driver downloads.

At least once you get it, it works, and works properly. Not like the EXTREMELY invasive “Satan-Spawned” totally unacceptable-working only when the stars align-crap from HP. I can’t wait for my “new” HP printer to die so I can go back to a Canon unit. Have done the Lexmark thing too, but hoops and all, will go back to Canon at the earliest opportunity.
At standard home level printing canon pretty much owns every other major brand out there, it’s worth the extra 3 clicks it takes for the drivers.
Word to the wise – once you have downloaded the setup/zip/rar file with your printer drivers, save it for future reference.
I have an external hard drive that is specifically for that purpose. It has ISO images, setup files and zipped/rarred files of all the programs on my computer, saved into individual folders depending on the program. That way, if I need them later on down the track, they’re sitting patiently, ready to deploy.
It is amazing that Canon, HP, and others have been in the market for how long and they haven’t come up with a simple “plug-n-play” method for installing a printer directly to a PC or over the network. I will give Xerox kudos for simplifying the process by having the print driver, when loaded, ping the netword and detect the printer to install. The simplest way to install a new printer that I have come across.
P.S. Rich, would love for you to post this rant on http://www.killmypritner.com/forum