rh100
Well-Known Member
Almost there
when a printer has a network connection, it becomes independant of any pc's (on a home network anyway)
each pc should then be able to communicate to it independantly of any other pc.
this is because a network port can be anywhere on the network (within the networks own constraints), the pc's will send the data to the printer via the network, the traffic being handled by the routers and switches, so does not need one particular pc left on to talk to the printer on behalf of the others.
IF the printer was connected by USB or parallel cable, then those ports generally only exist on a PC (but some network to usb print servers are available), so therefore the pc that has the physical connection to the printer needs to be on, and sharing it's connection to the printer over the network for the other pc's to send their print jobs to.
when a printer has a network connection, it becomes independant of any pc's (on a home network anyway)
each pc should then be able to communicate to it independantly of any other pc.
this is because a network port can be anywhere on the network (within the networks own constraints), the pc's will send the data to the printer via the network, the traffic being handled by the routers and switches, so does not need one particular pc left on to talk to the printer on behalf of the others.
IF the printer was connected by USB or parallel cable, then those ports generally only exist on a PC (but some network to usb print servers are available), so therefore the pc that has the physical connection to the printer needs to be on, and sharing it's connection to the printer over the network for the other pc's to send their print jobs to.