larry price wrote:
1. any network printer (drawback $$$)
2. any native postscript printer (again $$)
3. Anything listed in here http://www.linuxprinting.org/printer_list.cgi
( much cheaper but more time consuming)
One alternative is to buy a dedicated print server
n < $100
Netgear makes one that includes a 4-port switch and firewall,
D-link makes about 4 different models,
and there's probably a bunch of off-brand manufacturers as well.
(realistically that's $35.00 USD worth of electronics that should have
been in the printer in the first place but Oh well)
That won't help with sleek. It would require the print server
to run windoze so it can run the proprietary driver.
The HP Deskjet 985Cxi works. Spendy.
--
Allen Brown
work: Agilent Technologies non-work: http://www.peak.org/~abrown/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I figure you have the same chance of winning the lottery
whether you play or not. ---Fran Libowitz
On Mon, 10 Jan 2005 21:16:26 +0000, Jeff Newton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Well, than I'll ask this question - CAN someone please recommend a
printer that I can work with, instead of a paper weight??
Allen Brown wrote:
Jeff
Many of the low end printers (including ones from HP) are "sleek".
That means they have no (or little) on-board intelligence. They
depend on the host computer to do most of the work of the printer.
There are two problems with this. First of all, it slows down your
computer. But more serious for us in the Open Source world is that
these printers are generally not released with drivers for open
source. That means that they are just large paper weights.
-
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