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Chapter 10 Chapter 10: Printer Management
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Chapter 10 Learning Objectives n Describe the printing process used by Windows NT n Install a local printer in Windows NT Server n Explain and install printer pooling n Mange printer services and configure print devices continued
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Chapter 10 Learning Objectives n Control print jobs and printing status n Install and manage a nonlocal printer n Solve a common Windows NT Spooler service printing problems
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Chapter 10 Windows NT Printing n Print client: Client computer that generates a print job n Print server: Network computer/server device that connects printers to network for sharing and receives/processes print requests from print clients n Print device: Device (printer or fax) that uses Spooler services in Windows NT
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Chapter 10 Windows NT Printing n Network-interface printer: A printer with its own “print server” card, which enables it to be connected directly to a network n Spooling: A process working in the background to enable several print files to go to a single printer
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Chapter 10 Windows NT Printing n Printer driver: Holds configuration information for a printer u lives in kernel mode u allows applications to be written to one interface F formerly, application had to “know about” each type of supported printer
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Chapter 10 Printing Stages n Print file is generated at user’s workstation n User’s print file is sent to network printer share n Print file is spooled at the printer share n When its turn comes, print file is sent to the printer along with configuration information from print driver continued
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Chapter 10 Printing Stages n File is printed after first page is received or after all of file is received F affects wait times
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Chapter 10 The Technical Printing Process n Graphics Device Interface (GDI) u An interface on a Windows network print client u Works with a local software application and a local printer driver to format a file to be sent to a local printer or network print server continued
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Chapter 10 The Technical Printing Process n Rendering: Graphically creating a print job n Spool file: A print file written to disk until it can be transmitted to a printer
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Chapter 10 Print Job Data Types n Data type: Means by which information is formatted in a print file u RAW u RAW with FF appended u RAW with FF auto u TEXT u Enhanced metafile (EMF) u PSCRIPT1
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Chapter 10 Installing a Local Printer in Windows NT Server Printers used on a network Workstation Laser printer connected by a print server card Windows NT server WorkstationColor ink-jet printer Ethernet
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Chapter 10 Installing a Local Printer Entering the type of printer
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Chapter 10 Installing a Local Printer n Guidelines for printer and a printer share name: u Compose names easily understood and spelled by those who will use the printer u Include a room number, floor, workstation name to help identify printer location u Include descriptive information about the printer (type, manufacturer, model)
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Chapter 10 Installing a Local Printer Creating a printer share
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Chapter 10 Allocating Virtual Memory for PostScript Printers n PostScript printer u Has special firmware or cartridges to print using page-description language u Sometimes slows down when printing files containing several fonts and font sizes n Windows NT Server includes an option to make virtual memory available to PostScript printer to circumvent purchase of extra RAM for that printer
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Chapter 10 Setting Printer Share Permissions n Permissions: Sets printer share permissions only n Auditing: Used to record printer events n Ownership: Used to take ownership of the printer share
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Chapter 10 Printer Share Permissions
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Chapter 10 Printer Pooling n Involves configuring two or more identical printers with one printer setup or printer share F “identical” as in use same print driver e.g. many HP printers can use same driver, potentially by omitting some featurese.g. many HP printers can use same driver, potentially by omitting some features
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Chapter 10 Printer Scheduling
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Chapter 10 Sharing Printers
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Chapter 10 Security n Auditing tracks successful or failed attempts at: u Printing jobs u Using Full Control permissions u Deleting jobs u Changing permissions on the printer share u Taking ownership of the printer continued
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Chapter 10 Security n Ownership of a printer is usually held by administrators; enables anyone with Full Control permissions to take ownership
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Chapter 10 Managing Print Jobs n Users with Print permission can: u Send print jobs to the printer u Pause, resume, restart their own print jobs u Delete their own print jobs n Printer Operators and Server Operators having Manage Documents permission can: u Send print jobs to the printer u Pause, resume, restart any user’s print jobs u Delete any user’s print jobs
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Chapter 10 Connecting to a Nonlocal Printer n Very useful when you manage a large network with network printers located in distant buildings n You can change the properties of the shared printer you just installed, even though you are not logged on to its host computer
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Chapter 10 Solving Common Printing Problems n When the Windows NT Spooler service experiences a temporary problem, gets out of synchronization, or hangs, print jobs are not processed until the problem is solved n Stop and restart the Spooler service (warn users first; queued print jobs will be deleted)
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Chapter 10 Chapter Summary n Network printing is as important as file access and file management for many users. u Complex area involving clients, print servers, and printers n Printing involves particular data types used to enable a document formatted by a software application to print. continued
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Chapter 10 Chapter Summary n Installing a local or nonlocal printer is handled by the Add Printer Wizard. n Printers and print jobs can be managed according to your needs.
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