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Connecting to Local and Network Print DevicesAlthough limited print server. The installation software includes support for hundreds of printers from a considerable number of printer manufacturers. Windows XP Professional includes a large number of features in support of network printing.Before you look at the printing process and its management, it is important to clarify the terms associated with printing and the manner in which Microsoft defines them. You should be familiar with the following terms:
Windows XP Professional supports several different print setups. The following indicates some typical combinations:
Connecting to a Local Print DeviceObjective:Connect to local and network print devices.
When you attach a Chapter 13, "Configuring, Managing, and Troubleshooting Users and Groups."To install and share a local printer, follow the steps outlined in Step by Step 6.1.
Managing Printers and Print JobsObjective:Connect to local and network print devices.
Having completed installing a printer, you need to learn how to manage the printer and the jobs users send to it. The task of managing printers and print jobs includes various activities such as sharing the printer, configuring printer and print server properties, configuring TCP/IP printing, performing document management tasks, and so on. This section covers these tasks. Configuring Printer SharingIt is easy to share or stop sharing a printer, as Step by Step 6.2 demonstrates.
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Managing Printers and Print Servers
You can manage a series of properties for printers and print servers from the Printers and Faxes application. Step by Step 6.3 shows you how to manage printer and print server properties.
Step by Step: 6.3 Configuring Printer and Print Server Properties
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Creating a Printer PoolIf you have more printer pool from the Ports tab of the printer's Properties dialog box. Doing so associates the printer with more than one print device. To client computers, the printer pool appears as though it were a single printer.When users submit print jobs to the printer pool, the jobs are printed on any available print device. You should position the physical print devices in close proximity to each other so that the user does not have to search for print jobs. Enabling separator pages is a best practice that you should follow so that the users can locate their print jobs rapidly and conveniently. |
Controlling Access to Printers by Using Permissions
Objective:Connect to local and network print devices.
- Control access to printers by using permissions.
Just as you can Chapter 5, you can assign permissions to printers. Printers have access control lists (ACLs) that you can modify in the same manner. As described in Step by Step 6.4, you can configure a printer's permissions from the Security tab of its Properties dialog box:
Step by Step: 6.4 Configuring Printer Permissions
Chapter 5 for file and folder permissions. Connecting to an Internet PrinterObjective:Connect to local and network print devices.
Windows XP Professional Internet Printing Protocol (IPP), which is a protocol that uses (HyperText Transfer Protocol) HTTP to send print jobs across the Internet or corporate intranet. Computers running Windows 2000, Windows XP, or Windows Server 2003 support this protocol.To enable a computer to act as a remote print server, you need to install IIS on the print server. Because Windows XP Professional is limited to no more than 10 concurrent connections, it is recommended that you employ a computer running Windows 2000 Server or Windows Server 2003 as an Internet print server. For more information on IIS in Windows XP Professional, see Chapter 11, "Implementing, Managing, and Troubleshooting Network Protocols and Services."After you have configured IIS on the remote print server, it is simple to connect to it, as Step by Step 6.5 shows.
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