> http://www.inet.net.nz/~rossd/output.txt

This doesn't show anything immediately obvious, but it was worth trying.

Reading the perl script Michael posted shows that although the main data
is trivially compressed (probably zip, but could be gzip or bzip2 with
the zlib library), the compressed data is inside some kind of container
structure. It's not possible to trivially decompress/unpack a .dmg file.
Use the perl script.

The bogus output of file is probably caused by random binary data of the
container (less likely the compressed data) being errornously recognised
as some obscure executable format.

Actually, just for fun, run unzip -l on the .dmg file.

Nick is right though, it's worth checking whether you already have a PPD
file for this printer on your computer.

Volker

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Volker Kuhlmann                 is possibly list0570 with the domain in header
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