Jim Mowreader
June 5th 03, 04:39 PM
You must condition yourself to ignore the fact that it's
a networked printer!
Start with an Adobe PostScript 3 printer; these are
accessible via TCP/IP. Set the printer to an IP address
within your local network...192.xx.xx.xxx with the same
subnet mask everything else on your network is set to.
Then create a new printer in Windows. Tell it you're
connecting to a local printer connected through a TCP/IP
port. The Configure a New TCP/IP Printer Wizard takes
care of the rest.
a networked printer!
Start with an Adobe PostScript 3 printer; these are
accessible via TCP/IP. Set the printer to an IP address
within your local network...192.xx.xx.xxx with the same
subnet mask everything else on your network is set to.
Then create a new printer in Windows. Tell it you're
connecting to a local printer connected through a TCP/IP
port. The Configure a New TCP/IP Printer Wizard takes
care of the rest.