WINDOWS 1002000 PROFESSIONAL RESOURCE KIT [Electronic resources] نسخه متنی

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WINDOWS 1002000 PROFESSIONAL RESOURCE KIT [Electronic resources] - نسخه متنی

Chris Aschauer

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Creating and Sending Print Jobs


Windows 2000 Professional supports many different ways to create and send a print job to the printer. You can send print jobs in the following ways:


    Drag the file you want to print to the printer's icon in the Printer folder. This sends the file to the printer on which you dropped the file.

    Create a shortcut for a printer, and then add it to the Send To menu. Right-click a file, point to Send To, and click the name of the printer you want to use.

    Open the file you want to print in the program you used to create the file. Click File, and then click Print.

    Right-click the file you want to print, and then click Print. this prints directly to the default printer, and then closes the application when the file has printed.


Modifications to the Print Dialog Box


The Windows 2000 Print dialog box includes several modifications. Figure 14.7 shows the new appearance of the Print dialog box.


Figure 14.7 General Tab of the Print Dialog Box

The Print dialog box includes a number of improvements:


    The Layout and Paper/Quality tabs replace Preferences, which was available in previous versions of Windows.

    The Find Printer button allows browsing for printers not already installed on your computer. after you find a printer, you can use point and print to establish a connection with the printer and download any required drivers.


New Printer Properties Dialog Box


The new Printer Properties dialog box allows each user to set different properties for a printer. Because a users' printer preferences are preserved for each user, there is no need to set preferences each time the printer is used.

Enhanced Printer Drivers


Printing enhancements are made possible in large part by the Universal driver and the PostScript driver.

Universal Driver


The Universal driver has been optimized to provide higher quality and performance printing. Color printing using ICM 2.0 ensures that color images are accurately maintained. The Generic Print Description (GPD) supports minidrivers, abstracting the details of each printer's communications, thereby allowing unsupported printers to work with Windows 2000.

The Universal driver enhances font performance and capabilities. Printer font substitution results in better output, and 2-byte fonts are supported, enabling printing of extended character sets. The set of extended character fonts supported includes Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, Indic, Thai, Kana, and Hangul characters, punctuation marks, and ideographs.

The Universal driver is designed to support customization, allowing greater flexibility in the sorts of print devices that can be used with Windows 2000.

PostScript 5.0 Driver


The PostScript driver provides better performance through enhanced virtual memory management. Color printing with the PostScript driver uses ICM 2.0 ensuring that color images are faithfully maintained.

Microsoft has extended the PostScript driver to support more font formats and provide the structure for future customization.

PostScript continues to support the following:


    Support for postscript levels 1, 2, and 3.

    ICM 2.0.

    Control over output data format, allowing for CTRL+D handling, Binary Communications Protocol (BCP), Tagged Binary Communications Protocol (TBCP), and pure binary (8-bit) channels (AppleTalk, for example).

    PPD version 4.2 and .wpd files.

    Simplified Printer Description (.spd) files.

    Tracking of virtual memory available to the printer.


Image Color Management 2.0


Image Color Management (ICM) 2.0 ensures that colors are accurately reproduced when printed. If you want to use ICM 2.0, your printer must support it. In some cases, you might want to use a third-party calibration tool to create or update a color profile for your printer. This will compensate for variations between different printers of the same type or variations that occur as a printer ages.

For more information about ICM 2.0, see "Scanners and Cameras" in this book.

New Ways to Send Print Jobs


Windows 2000 includes a number of new ways to send print jobs, including new port monitors and newly supported connection methods such as USB.

Standard Port Monitor


The new Standard Port Monitor connects clients to network printers that use the TCP/IP protocol. It replaces the LPR Port Monitor (Lprmon) as the preferred port monitor for TCP/IP printers connected directly to the network through a network adapter. The new standard port simplifies installation of most TCP/IP printers by automatically detecting the network settings needed to print. Printers connected to a UNIX or VAX host might still require Lprmon.

The Standard TCP/IP Port Monitor (SPM), which uses TCP/IP as the transport protocol, is the preferred port monitor in Windows 2000. SPM uses the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) to configure and monitor the printer status. In addition to SPM, Internet printing adds a Hypertext Transport Protocol (HTTP) print provider. All port monitors that were included with Windows NT 4.0 are still present, except the Digital Network port monitor, Hewlett-Packard JetAdmin, and the Lexmark Port Monitors.

SPM communicates with network-ready printers, network adapters like Hewlett-Packard's JetDirect, and external network print servers like Intel's NetPort. SPM can support many printers on a single server and is faster and easier to configure than Lprmon.

SPM sends documents to a printer using either the RAW or LPR printing protocols. Together, these protocols support most current TCP/IP printers. Do not confuse these print protocols with the transport protocols such as TCP/IP or Data Link Control (DLC).

The RAW protocol is the default for most print devices. To send a RAW-formatted job, the print server opens a TCP stream to the printer's port 9100 (or another port number) to select connections to multiport external devices. For example, on some devices port 9101 goes to the first parallel port, 9102 goes to the second parallel port, and so on.

SPM uses the LPR protocol when you specify it during port installation or reconfiguration, or when Port 9100 protocol cannot be established.

SPM deviates from the LPR standard in two ways. First, SPM does not conform to the RFC 1179 requirement that the source TCP port lie between port 721 and port 731. SPM uses ports from the general, unreserved pool of ports (ports 1024 and above). Second, the LPR standard states that print jobs must include information about the size of the job the port monitor sends. Sending a print job with job size information requires that the port monitor spool the job twice, once to determine size, and once to send the job to the spooler. Spooling the job only once improves printing performance, so SPM sends the job to the spooler without determining the actual job size, and claims the job is a default size, regardless of the job's actual size.

SPM can send print jobs to the LPD service running on a print server. For more information about LPD, see "Print Components" later in this chapter.

Improved Status Information

SPM is compatible with RFC 1759, the standard for the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP). As a result, SPM can provide much more detailed status than Lprmon.

For more information about printing to devices located on other platforms, see "Operating System Exceptions" earlier in this chapter.

To configure a standard TCP/IP port by using SPM


    Select an installed printer, click File, and then click Properties.

    Click the Ports tab, and then click Add Port.

    Click Standard TCP/IP Port, and then click New Port. This starts the Add Standard TCP/IP Printer Port wizard, shown in Figure 14.8.


    Figure 14.8 Standard TCP/IP Printer Port Wizard

    Type a name or the IP address of a print device in the Printer Name or IP Address text box.

    Type a host-resolvable port name, which can be any character string, in the Port Name text box, or use the default name that the wizard supplies, and then click Next.

    The system sends an SNMP get command to the device. An SNMP get command asks for the status of a device, so in this case, the system uses the SNMP get command to request a status information from that printer. Using the SNMP values returned from the get command, the device details are determined and the appropriate device options are displayed for further selection (for example, you can select the correct printer port).

    If prompted by the Additional Port Information Required dialog box, click Standard, and then select one of the devices listed.

    – Or –

    Click Custom, and then configure the port by using the Configure Standard TCP/IP Port Monitor dialog box. If you do not know details of the port, use Generic Network Card.

    If the wizard cannot determine the protocol, it prompts you for the information. If you are not prompted, skip to step 8.

    When prompted for the protocol, select either RAW or LPR. RAW is preferred.

    If the wizard detects that the device supports multiple ports (indicated in the Tcpmon.ini file), it prompts you to select a port.

    Select a port from the list and finish the wizard.

    The new port is listed on the Ports tab of the Properties dialog box.


Reconfiguration

The SPM port can be reconfigured in the printer's Properties dialog box. Click Configure Port on the Ports tab. The SPM has its own Configure dialog box that appears, as shown in Figure 14.9.


Figure 14.9 Configure Standard TCP/IP Printer Port Monitor Dialog Box

CAUTION

The Configure Standard TCP/IP Port Monitor dialog box does not verify that the options you select are correct. If they are incorrect, the port does not work. Check with the printer manufacturer to see if the device supports SNMP.

Status Reporting

Printers return status over SNMP. Since SPM is compatible with SNMP, it allows detailed status reporting when the printer provides it. Printers that are not compliant with the SNMP standard do not return status information. Therefore, when there is an error during printing, the spooler displays a general printing error or does not detect any error at all.

Internet Printing


Windows 2000 supports Internet printing. This makes it possible to use printers located anywhere in the world by sending print jobs using Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP). Using Microsoft® Internet Information Services or a Web Peer Server, Windows 2000 creates a Web page that provides information about printers and provides the transport for printing over the Internet. Using the Internet, printers can be used to replace fax machines or postal mail.

Use an Internet printer as you would any other Windows 2000 installed printer.

For more information about installing an Internet printer on your computer, see "Installing Network Printers" earlier in this chapter.

For more information about managing print jobs sent by using IPP, see "Internet Printing Management" later in this chapter.

USB


Windows 2000 supports printing to Universal Serial Bus (USB) printers. USB is comprised of an external bus architecture for connecting USB-capable peripheral devices to a host computer, as well as a communication protocol that supports serial data transfers between a host system and USB-capable peripherals.

IrDA


Infrared Data Association (IrDA) is a system of exchanging information between computers using infrared transmissions that do not require a cable connection. IrDA can occur between any two devices that support IrDA (such as computers and printers). Windows 2000 supports printing using IrDA.

IrDA is a point-to-point protocol based on TCP/IP and WinSock APIs. IrDA can be used to exchange data between non-Windows devices that use the IrDA protocol. IrDA exchanges data at rates approaching those typically provided by local area network (LAN) connections.

Support for the IEEE 1284.4 (DOT4) Protocol


Windows 2000 supports DOT4, enabling Windows 2000 print servers to send data to multiple parts of a single multifunction peripheral (MFP) device. DOT4 is a driver that creates different port settings for each device function, so a device with both printing and scanning capabilities can process both types of jobs simultaneously.

DOT4 is automatically installed when a DOT4-enabled device is detected, so no installation or configuration is required.

Sending Faxes


Windows 2000 integrates sending and receiving faxes through your computer's fax modem in the same way it sets up a printer.

If your computer has a fax modem, install the modem by using the Add Printer wizard, the same as you install a printer.

When creating fax jobs, use the Send Fax wizard to provide information to send your fax. The fax wizard includes a number of pages that allow you to configure the following fax job attributes. The Send Fax wizard includes the following pages:


    Welcome page.

    Recipient and dialing information. Use this page to enter the phone number to which you want to send the fax (or multiple numbers, if desired), and special dialing rules, such as dialing 9.

    Adding a cover page. Use this page to add a cover page and note for the fax's recipient.

    Scheduling transmission. Use this page to determine when to send the fax. by scheduling transmissions, you can take advantage of lower rates during specific times of day.

    Summary page. Use this page to confirm the configuration you have chosen before sending the fax.


After you use the Send Fax wizard, Windows 2000 automatically uses the modem to send your job to the fax numbers you have specified, unless you have specified that the job is to be sent at a later time. If the fax job is not successfully sent, Windows 2000 tries sending the fax job again at regular intervals, depending on the information set in Fax Service Properties.

For more information about configuring Windows 2000 to send faxes, see "Configuring Fax" earlier in this chapter.

Reverse Order Printing


Windows 2000 allows printing to begin on the last page of a document and end on the first page.

To print in reverse order


    Open the document to be printed.

    Click File, click Print, and then click the Layout tab.

    Click Back to Front.

    Click Print to print the document.


Number of Copies


Windows 2000 supports printing up to 10,000 copies of a document in one print job. Previously, some printers were limited to 255 copies per print job.

To select the number of copies to be printed


    Open the document to be printed.

    Click File, and then click Print.

    On the General tab, type a number from 1 to 10,000 in Number of copies.

    Click Print to print the document.


Printing Multiple Pages on a Single Page


You can print multiple pages of a document on a single piece of paper. This is called n-up printing, and is useful when you want to conserve paper when printing a document with a small amount of information on each page.

To set the number of pages to print on one piece of paper


    Open the document to be printed.

    Click File, click Print, and then click the Layout tab.

    Select the number of pages to be printed on one piece of paper from the Pages Per Sheet box.

    Click Print to print the document.


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