brian@t2ns1.gcs.co.nz (11/08/89)
Hi y'all. Has anybody ever come across a printer hanging directly off a thick enet transceiver? We have a situation here where such a printer would be invaluable. Obviously it would need appropriate intelligence to handle addresses, domains etc. with it's card. Preferably a laser, HP II compat. There are three minis on our lan, running TCP/IP, Thick+thin, B20's, Pacnet etc. etc. etc. Any and all help greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance, -- Brian Burroughs (I know I have a boring .sig!), Govt Computing Service Ltd, _________ P.O. Box 11-642, Manners Street, Wellington, New Zealand. _________ ______________ Voice: +64 4 801-8000 Fax: +64 4 801-8888 __________________ _____________________ Email: brian@t2ns1.gcs.co.nz __________________________
pipkins@qmsseq.imagen.com (Jeff Pipkins) (11/10/89)
In article <1989Nov7.210143.26795@t2ns1.gcs.co.nz> brian@t2ns1.gcs.co.nz writes: > > >Has anybody ever come across a printer hanging directly off a thick >enet transceiver? We have a situation here where such a printer would >be invaluable. Obviously it would need appropriate intelligence to >handle addresses, domains etc. with it's card. QMS, Inc., of Mobile Alabama sells a box we call "PrintLink". It has a Thick or thin Ethernet connection and acts like an FTP server. You call it up with FTP, send your file over, and it eventually despools it to the attached printer. The sender is never made to wait on the printer. The box has a console so that you can see the queue and delete jobs or put them on hold, etc. You can also see the queue by using the FTP "ls" command. It will support up to three printers. QMS's number is 205/633-4300. I'm not sure who the sales person is, but ask for Sarah Young; she can answer questions about it and direct you. Jeff Pipkins QMS, Inc. "The opinions I have expressed here *ARE* my employer's!" ;)
david@ms.uky.edu (David Herron -- One of the vertebrae) (11/12/89)
Imagen used to have ethernet interfaces for their printers that talked TCP/IP. I suppose they probably still do have such an interface ... of course they're not HPLJ-II compatible either :-) uhm .. (I'm famous for that "uhm") .. why wouldn't it work to hang the printer off a terminal server? Or do you not have any terminal servers? Something I've always wondered about ... most workstations come with a serial port. Does anybody use that serial port for a local printer? -- <- David Herron; an MMDF guy <david@ms.uky.edu> <- ska: David le casse\*' {rutgers,uunet}!ukma!david, david@UKMA.BITNET <- <- New official address: attmail!sparsdev!dsh@attunix.att.com
roy@phri.UUCP (Roy Smith) (11/14/89)
In <13207@s.ms.uky.edu> david@ms.uky.edu (David Herron) writes: > Something I've always wondered about ... most workstations come with > a serial port. Does anybody use that serial port for a local printer? Most of our diskless Sun-3s (2 RS-232 ports each) have one (or sometimes 2) serial devices hanging off the back of them, either terminals running normal logins or printers of various sorts. I'm not sure what you mean by "local" printer; all our Sun-driven printers are accessable via the normal Unix lpr mechanism. -- Roy Smith, Public Health Research Institute 455 First Avenue, New York, NY 10016 {att,philabs,cmcl2,rutgers,hombre}!phri!roy -or- roy@alanine.phri.nyu.edu "The connector is the network"
perand@nada.kth.se (Per Andersson) (11/14/89)
In article <13207@s.ms.uky.edu> david@ms.uky.edu (David Herron -- One of the vertebrae) writes: >uhm .. (I'm famous for that "uhm") .. why wouldn't it work to hang >the printer off a terminal server? Or do you not have any terminal >servers? One reason could be the lack of speed - most printers with RS232 interfaces only manage 9600 BPS, some 19200 BPS. One nice product I've seen is by an english company called Software Products. They take a Canon chassi and connect a parallell cable to a VME card for SUNs they developed. This makes the printer work as fast as it can, but I dont know what youre supposed to send to the card. I suppose it's a bitmap, and possibly only their own DTP program work with it. Per -- Per Andersson Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden perand@admin.kth.se, @tds.kth.se, @nada.kth.se or perhaps {backbone}!sunic!ttds!perand
mhampson@wpi.wpi.edu (Mark A. Hampson) (11/14/89)
I have recently seen an add in Computer Shopper for a device that will
allow an HP-LJ to be placed on a "LAN". As to the protocal that it will
speak, the add did not say, but we are asking for info from the company
as I write.
--
/----------------------------------------------------------------------------\
| We are not in an energy crisis, we are having an entropy crisis... |
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ggw@wolves.uucp (Gregory G. Woodbury) (11/20/89)
In article <5582@wpi.wpi.edu> mhampson@wpi.wpi.edu (Mark A. Hampson) writes: >I have recently seen an add in Computer Shopper for a device that will >allow an HP-LJ to be placed on a "LAN". As to the protocal that it will >speak, the add did not say, but we are asking for info from the company >as I write. Additionally, the latest QMS ad in Computer Systems News (I think - could have been MIS Week or Unix Today) talks about their upper end print engines and that the "talk directly to your ethernet". QMS is in Mobile Alabama, (USA) <Standard disclaimer: not connected to QMS, nor a customer> -- Gregory G. Woodbury Sysop/owner Wolves Den UNIX BBS, Durham NC UUCP: ...dukcds!wolves!ggw ...dukeac!wolves!ggw [use the maps!] Domain: ggw@cds.duke.edu ggw@ac.duke.edu ggw%wolves@ac.duke.edu Phone: +1 919 493 1998 (Home) +1 919 684 6126 (Work) [The line eater is a boojum snark! ] <standard disclaimers apply>
neil@cpd.com (Neil Gorsuch) (11/20/89)
In article <1989Nov7.210143.26795@t2ns1.gcs.co.nz> brian@t2ns1.gcs.co.nz writes: >Has anybody ever come across a printer hanging directly off a thick >enet transceiver? We have a situation here where such a printer would >be invaluable. Obviously it would need appropriate intelligence to >handle addresses, domains etc. with it's card. First, let me warn you that I am biased towards the following solution, since we just introduced it as a new product. I assume that since you can't put it on one of the serial ports already existing on one of your machines that you need a Centronics parallel port for the printer. Our new box allows you to add a Centronics parallel port (and some serial ports) onto the SCSI port of Sun's and other machines, while using the standard tty drivers already in the machine, thus allowing network printer access via entries in /etc/printcap files. -- Neil Gorsuch INTERNET: neil@cpd.com UUCP: uunet!zardoz!neil MAIL: 1209 E. Warner, Santa Ana, CA, USA, 92705 PHONE: +1 714 546 1100 Uninet, a division of Custom Product Design, Inc. FAX: +1 714 546 3726 AKA: root, security-request, uuasc-request, postmaster, usenet, news
jet@flatline.UUCP (It's "Mr. Boyo" to you Dylan) (11/20/89)
>[Discussion of printers that work on an ethernet.]
I just sent in a PO at work for an Excelan Fastpath/4 Ethernet->AppleTalk
standalone unit. Around $2K (after education discount) for the box
and software for TCP/IP. Kinda pricey, but I'm probably going to
get DECNET software for it as well, and we already have to LaserWriters
and a room full of macs that can take advantage of it. (ie: the
price is justified by the fact that the Mac's will be able to go through
it to our ethernet boxes..)
Also, Xerox used to have an ethernet laser-printer that hooked to the
Xerox Star. I'm kinda sketchy on the details, cuz' I was just a "user"
then. :-)
--
I most like CD players because I don't have to worry about feedback through
the needle anymore... :-)
J. Eric Townsend uunet!sugar!flatline!jet jet@flatline.lonestar.org
EastEnders Mailing list: eastender@flatline.UUCP
vanden@studsys.mu.edu (vandenberg) (11/23/89)
I'm not sure if it speaks tcp/ip but LAN Systems LAN Port might work. We will be using one on a Novell network(ipx) in a week or two. Supposedly it has all the workings of an ethernet station in a box the size of a hand then just a serial port to plug in a device. If anyone is interested I can post something when we get it in(the 2 weeks was what our distributer said :-) ).......or if you want, the phone and address for LANsystems follow. LANsystems, 5009 Broadway New York, NY 10012 212-431-1255 tech supt or 212-431-8484 sales??? Usual disclaimer RE: only satisfied cust. and so -------- Tom Vandenberg {..uunet..uwvax!uwmcsd1..}!marque!studsys!vanden vanden%studsys@marque.UUCP {..uwvax..arpa..}!studsys.mu.edu!vanden
stullich@quando.UUCP (Thomas Stullich) (11/26/89)
We use some HP-Laserjet over LAN (TCP/IP) via Terminalserver. We also have an interface which you can append to /usr/spool/lp/interface/* (on UNIX-Systems), so the printer-scheduler has not to be modified. costs for terminalserver with 6 RS232-Ports: about 2500 $ -- Thomas Stullich UUCP: {backbone}!unido!quando!stullich OR stullich@quando.uucp Quantum GmbH Bitnet: UNIDO!quando!stullich OR stullich%quando@UNIDO(.bitnet) Dortmund internet: stullich%quando%mcvax.UUCP@cwi.nl Germany internet: stullich%quando%UNIDO.bitnet@mitvma.mit.edu
phil@delta.eecs.nwu.edu (William LeFebvre) (11/28/89)
In article <1989Nov7.210143.26795@t2ns1.gcs.co.nz> brian@t2ns1.gcs.co.nz writes: >Has anybody ever come across a printer hanging directly off a thick >enet transceiver? We have a situation here where such a printer would >be invaluable. Obviously it would need appropriate intelligence to >handle addresses, domains etc. with it's card. YES! QMS/Imagen sells printers that sit DIRECTLY on the ethernet. There is *NO* ethernet/parallel box sitting inbetween! The one that I am familiar with is the Imagen 2308. It is the standard Canon LBP-CX engine. It comes with a separate processor box and, as an option, you can get a 3-com ethernet card to go in the box (this option also comes with the appropriate printer software to speak TCP and UDP). We had two of these when I was a Rice and they worked wonderfully well. The only downside is the price. They are, compared to most laser printers, very expensive (on the order of $10,000). They don't come with postscript, but you can get "UltraScript" as an option. The combination of ethernet, imPress (a compact printer language), and multiprocessors (the 2308 has 3 separate 68000 processors in it) make it a very fast laser printer. Unless you're printing a LARGE bitmap or alot of vectors in Tektronix mode, the printer itself is always the bottleneck---the page processing is always ahead of the printing. William LeFebvre Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Northwestern University <phil@eecs.nwu.edu>
jml@tw-rnd.SanDiego.NCR.COM (Michael Lodman) (11/30/89)
>In article <1989Nov7.210143.26795@t2ns1.gcs.co.nz> brian@t2ns1.gcs.co.nz writes: >Has anybody ever come across a printer hanging directly off a thick >enet transceiver? We have a situation here where such a printer would >be invaluable. Obviously it would need appropriate intelligence to >handle addresses, domains etc. with it's card. Talaris Systems in San Diego makes what they refer to as an Ethernet Printstation. It attaches directly to the ethernet. They also support many different printer emulations such as HPPL, HPGL, and Postscript. Their phone number is : (619) 587-0787.