Networking For Dummies. Doug Lowe

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can print to a network printer, you have to configure your computer to access the network printer that you want to use. From the Start menu, open the Control Panel and then double-click the Printers icon. If your computer is already configured to work with a network printer, an icon for the network printer appears in the Printers folder. You can tell a network printer from a local printer by the shape of the printer icon. Network printer icons have a pipe attached to the bottom of the printer.

      If you don’t have a network printer configured for your computer, you can add one by using the Add Printer Wizard. Just follow these steps:

      1 Open the Control Panel.Windows 7 or earlier: Choose Start ⇒ Control Panel.Windows 8 and later: Press the Windows key, type Control, and then click the Control Panel icon.

      2 Click Devices and Printers.

      3 Click the Add a Printer button on the toolbar.This step starts the Add Printer Wizard, as shown in Figure 3-7.

      4 Click the printer you want to use. If you can’t find the printer you want to use, ask your network administrator for the printer’s UNC path, which is the name used to identify the printer on the network, or its IP address. Then click The Printer That I Want Isn’t Listed and enter the UNC or IP address for the printer when prompted.

      5 Click Next to add the printer.The wizard copies to your computer the correct printer driver for the network printer. (You may be prompted to confirm that you want to add the driver. If so, click Install Driver to proceed.)FIGURE 3-7: The Add Printer Wizard asks you to pick a printer.The Add Printer Wizard displays a screen that shows the printer’s name and asks whether you want to designate the printer as your default printer.

      6 (Optional) Designate the printer as your default printer.

      7 Click Next to continue.A final confirmation dialog box is displayed.

      8 Click Finish.You’re done!

      

Many network printers, especially newer ones, are connected directly to the network by using a built-in Ethernet card. Setting up these printers can be tricky. You may need to ask the network administrator for help in setting up this type of printer. (Some printers that are connected directly to the network have their own web addresses, such as Printer.SimpsonFamily.com. If that’s the case, you can often set up the printer in a click or two: Use your browser to go to the printer’s web page and then click a link that enables you to install the printer.)

      Printing to a network printer

Snapshot of a typical print dialog box.

      Playing with the print queue

      After you send your document to a network printer, you usually don’t have to worry about it. You just go to the network printer, and voilà! Your printed document is waiting for you.

      That’s what happens in the ideal world. In the real world, where you and I live, all sorts of things can happen to your print job between the time you send it to the network printer and the time it prints:

       You discover that someone else already sent a 50 trillion–page report ahead of you that isn’t expected to finish printing until the national debt is paid off.

       The price of a framis valve suddenly goes up by $2, rendering foolish the recommendations you made in your report.

       Your boss calls and tells you that his brother-in-law will be attending the meeting, so won’t you please print an extra copy of the proposal for him? Oh, and a photocopy won’t do. Originals only, please.

       You decide to take lunch, so you don’t want the output to print until you get back.

      Fortunately, your print job isn’t totally beyond your control just because you already sent it to the network printer. You can easily change the status of jobs that you already sent. You can change the order in which jobs print, hold a job so that it doesn’t print until you say so, or cancel a job.

Snapshot of managing a print queue.

      FIGURE 3-9: Managing a print queue.

      To manipulate the print jobs that appear in the print queue or in the printer itself, use these tricks:

       To temporarily stop a job from printing: Select the job and choose Document ⇒ Pause Printing. Choose the same command again to release the job from its state of frustration and print it out, already.

       To delete a print job: Select the job and choose Document ⇒ Cancel Printing.

       To stop the printer: Choose Printer ⇒ Pause Printing. To resume, choose the command again.

       To delete all print jobs: Choose Printer ⇒ Purge Print Documents.

       To cut to the front of the line: Drag to the top of the list the print job that you want to print.

      All these tips apply to your print jobs only. Unfortunately, you can’t capriciously delete other people’s print jobs.

      After you finish using the network, log off. Logging off the network makes the network drives and printers unavailable. Your computer is still physically connected to the network (unless you cut the network cable with pruning shears; it’s a bad idea — don’t do it!), but the network and its resources are unavailable to you.

      Here are a few other tips to keep in mind when you log off:

       After you turn off your computer, you’re automatically logged off the network. After you start your computer, you have to log on again. Logging off the network is a good

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