This could still be a network config issue. An easy way around might be to
connect (wired) both, the print server and the new laptop, to your router
(assuming that the router also acts as the dhcp server, and that both clients
are configured to get their ip address through dhcp). In the router's log you
can then see the connected devices and their respective IP addresses. Can you
connect from laptop to print server now? Klaus I don't think that can work. The
print-server doesn't have the ability to connect it to the router through a
wired port, it just has the wireless. The ethernet ports are only used to
bridge other non-wireless equipment through the printer-server to whatever
wireless network the printer-server is configured to use. The rub is the only
way to configure what wireless network the print-server uses is to put a
computer on one of those ethernet ports, hold the reset button on the
print-server resetting it to factory defaults, then configure the wireless via
a
web-page generated by the print-server. What seems weird to me, is using
ifconfig command to set an IP worked on the squeeze laptop, but didn't on the
wheezy laptop. Both systems seem to take the ip and the output of running
ifconfig -a looked the same on both. It was just that on one box I could
connect to the print-servers webpage and the other I couldn't. On both I took
care to disconnect from all other networks, so I wasn't a routing issue.