Endicia


Endicia Mac News | February 2009
Endicia Mac Newsletter, February 2009.

DYMO™ Printable Postage Powered by Endicia®

DYMO Stamps Printable Postage Sheets
InstaPostage® is now called DYMO™ Printable Postage Powered by Endicia®.

You can print on-demand stamps from either rolls or special stamp sheets. These sheets work on any modern laser or inkjet printer. These new sheets have 24 stamps and Endicia account holders can purchase deeply discounted packs of 5, 10, or 50 sheets.

These sheets have a new layout, and previous stock will also work with DYMO Printable Postage Powered by Endicia. DYMO™ Printable Postage Stamp Sheets by Endicia® are perfect for routine envelope mail such as pre-addressed reply envelopes such as your utility bill or windowed envelopes that can’t be fed through a printer. The rolls require a DYMO LabelWriter printer.

Learn more about DYMO Printable Postage Powered by Endicia.

• Purchase DYMO Printable Postage Stamp Sheets by Endicia
• Purchase a DYMO® LabelWriter® printer

Software Support

Software update
Did you know that you can batch print with Endicia for Mac? With just a few clicks, you can print similar groups of envelopes or labels. Find out how to batch print.

In the News

DYMO™ Printable Postage Powered by Endicia®, in the news
May 11, 2009 USPS Price Change:   The U.S. Postal Service® recently approved new prices for the mailing services sector, including the increase in the First-Class Mail® stamp to 44 cents.

Other changes include a price increase for Media Mail, Library Mail, Delivery Confirmation™ , Signature Confirmation™, and insurance. Endicia will provide complete support for the price change. Your DAZzle®, DYMO™ Printable Postage Powered by Endicia®, Endicia® for Mac, and DYMO Stamps® software will be updated to reflect these new prices.

Endicia will also have an informational web page on the price change that will describe the changes in more detail.

Current USPS Price Change Information

Did You Know?

Endicia questions answered
Did you know that the U.S. Postal Service adds 1.8 million new addresses each year to their delivery network—equivalent to the number of addresses in a city the size of Chicago?