On Fri, 20 Jan 2006 17:30:43 -0800, Mark <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>roy wrote:
>> Mark wrote:
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> I'm in a university department, and our lab wants to connect a printer
>>> to the network so others in the department can print to it. While this
>>> is a tech job, getting the tech department to do it usually takes a
>>> long time and we get charged for their labour.
>>>
>>> I have seen print servers in the shops, eg, the Linksys 4-Port USB
>>> Print Server for $69.99.
>>>
>>> Would this work across the department's network? How difficult would
>>> it be to set up?
>>>
>>> I don't know much about networks, so wondering just how much is
>>> involved. Any advice would be appreciated.
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>>
>>> Mark
>> what operating system?
>> is it an existing printer?
>>
>> my experience is limited. but if it is an existing printer for a
>> computer on the network I would expect to simply set it to be shared on
>> the computer it is attached to.
>>
>> if it is not currently connected to anything then you need some sort of
>> server to connect to. it sounds like a single printer, so adding a
>> device for ports would be redundant.
>>
>>
>> see what I mean?
>
>Yes, it's an existing printer, which is why I wasn't asking for which
>printer to buy. It is a HP Laserjet 2200D.
>
>I don't know why the operating system is relevant, as I thought
>different operating systems should all be able to access the same
>network printer. Most of the computers have Windows XP, but OSX and
>Linux functionality wouldn't hurt.
>
>We do have it attached to a computer at the moment, but we don't want
>the jobs to have to go through that computer. As I said, we need a print
>server. I think I got at least that bit right.
Mark;
If cost is your major concern then take a look at
www.hawkingtech.com
for their small print servers. I've used many of them on my own and
customer networks for group printing and they're easy to set up and
print to. Most are windows, linux, unix, mac compatiple. About $40
USD.
Set the IP per the supplied instructions and you're in business.
Bob