Unfortunately, neither the OfficeJet 200 nor the Pixma iP100 (nor the WF-100 predecessor, for that matter) was tested using our current benchmarking protocols, documents, or hardware, making a direct comparison between the three models' test scores inappropriate.
I tested the WF-110 over a USB 2.0 connection from our standard Intel Core i5 testbed PC running Windows 10 Professional.
The Canon Pixma iP100, a similar but older portable printer, has a 20ppm monochrome rating. Epson rates the printer at 6.7 pages per minute (ppm) for monochrome pages and 3.5ppm for color pages, compared with the HP 200's 10ppm black page rating. While the WF-110 has many admirable features, print speed is not one of them. Like most consumer-grade Epson printers these days, the WF-110 also supports hands-free, voice-activated printing through Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant, along with support for other services, such as Apple's Siri, Microsoft's Cortana and Samsung's Bixby, via IFTTT (if this then that) scripting technology. It also supports Box, Dropbox, Evernote, Google Drive, and Microsoft OneDrive cloud services.
iPrint allows you to print, scan, and share photos, emails, web pages, Microsoft Word documents, Excel spreadsheets, PowerPoint files, and PDF documents directly from your phone or tablet. You also get Epson Email Print, Epson Remote Print, Epson Print and Scan, Epson Photo Scan, Epson Scan to Cloud, and Epson iPrint through the Epson Connect collection of apps. Other mobile connectivity options include Apple AirPrint, Google Cloud Print, Fire OS support, and Mopria Print Service.
That last one is a wireless peer-to-peer protocol connection that supports mobile devices, allowing them to connect to the printer without an intermediary network. The WF-110's standard connectivity interfaces include wireless (802.11 b/g/n), connecting to a single PC via USB 2.0, and Wi-Fi Direct. However, the OfficeJet 200 comes with a 50-sheet input tray, allowing you to print longer without replenishing paper. 10 envelope or five sheets of photo paper. You'd expect a basic paper path with a printer this small, and that's exactly what you get: a 20-sheet input tray that can also hold one No. There's an SD card slot for printing from SD, SDHC, SDXC and MiniSD, MiniSDHC, MicroSD, MicroSDHC, and MicroSDXC (with adapter) memory devices. The control panel consists of a 1.4-inch color LCD, a set of navigational arrow keys with an OK button, and a Cancel button. Epson also offers an add-on external battery that increases cordless printing life by about an additional 500 prints. It will not, however, charge over USB while in use. Once charged, the WF-110's battery will last for about 100 monochrome prints or 50 color pages, and, of course, it will run indefinitely on AC power. Charging the WF-110 on AC takes about 2.5 hours, while charging it on USB with a 0.5A connection (USB 2.0) takes about 10 hours. According to Epson, charge times vary greatly based on charging methods. You can charge the WF-110's battery with the AC power adapter that comes in the box, or from a computer or mobile device via USB.