Old NEC Printer on Win2k?
Ravagin asks: "I am deeply in love with my Dell Inspiron 8100 running Windows 2000. I have a perfectly good NEC Silentwriter SuperScript 610Plus that I want to use; however, NEC's support site has nothing for Windows 2000 (the 610plus win95/98 drivers return a Windows version error). It's supposed to be HP LaserJet IIP compatible, but I've had no luck getting that to work. Google hasn't helped, either. Does anyone have any useful experience or sites for getting this old, 'unsupported' printer to play nice with Win2k?"
No, but I have another note on Windows Driver Support. Seems XP dislikes standard serial mice... *chuckle* Aren't they the most generic of all?
Would an NT driver work, as IIRC 2000 was based on NT.
:-)
Of cause I could be wrong
Wouldn't it be nice if schools got all the money they wanted and the army had to hold jumble sales for guns
From what I understand "Ask Slashdot" is supposed to be a section in which questions that might be of interest to a Large part of the geek readership here are placed.
/.?
Most of what I've been seeing here lately, though, is what amounts to tech support requests.
Don't we have, like IRC channels and message boards for that sort of thing? Why put it on
--
viqsi - See "vixen"
If we do not change our direction we are likely to end up where we are headed.
You can use LaserJet IIP drivers, which use PCL 3 i believe. The only problem is, it will only print at 300dpi.
I have a Xerox printer with the same problem. Your printer and mine use a proprietary rendering system called Adobe PrintGear to control the printer, this system was used in a number of cheap laser printers.
There is no way around this, since Adobe no longer supports it and the vendors who developed the drivers have no knowledge of it.
Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
This printer was / is an abomination. Somebody mentioned PCL drivers, I don't trust them. I was never able to get this printer to work with Windows NT.
Yours Sincerely, Michael.
I had an old SilentWriter (huge beast, great because it had a never-ending toner cartridge, it was huge).
I had to change a jumper or dip (can't remember) on the back to switch it to LaserJet II mode.
-Dave
Let's not stir that bag of worms...
Most of what I've been seeing here lately, though, is what amounts to tech support requests.
/. lacks a hardware/tech section, and "Ask Slashdot" seems to be a good place to catch some of these pearls.
/. audience to solve your Win2K problems, Cliff! (Ravagin, yeah right..)
I don't like the implications this statement makes. I find there are many valuable things that are learned in "best hardware/software/approach" for application questions or for solutions for not-so-common or easily solved problems. They don't get covered in the other sections because either its a question, or its subjective opinion, or just does not fall into a category. Also,
But I would not want "Ask Slashdot" to be a "Duh, how do I do this" section.
It is EGREGIOUS to be using this section to give tech support for WINDOZE questions! You shouldn't be using the
There is no America. There is no democracy. There is only IBM and AT&T and DuPont, Dow, General Electric, and Exxon
I understand that "linuxprinting" does not
sound like "How can I print in Windows" but
this page gives you the details you need to know
when you try to use it with a different or more
generic driver.
If queried about your printer, linuxprinting says:
--> Traditional "GDI" printer;
so you are dependant on drivers you get from
the vendor. Therefore the printer has been sorted into the category "Paperweight".....
Try the Windows-standard "Generic/Text Only" printer driver. That is (supposedly) compatible with every single printer that exists. It will operate most printers that don't have drivers.
... will work with an HP LaserJet 4 or 4m driver. I used to run into a lot of "unsupported printer" issues back when I was a Citrix admin. You can't make calls to fancy duplexing units or anything like that, but every printer I've personally tried could be made to print with that driver.
Another thought -- Set up an NT4.0 print server to handle it. We have some of them around here for precisely that reason.
- Freed
"Coffee should be black as hell, strong as death, and sweet as love." -Turkish Proverb
First: You're kind of screwed. I have the exact same printer, and it just doesn't work in Windows 2000. Unless there are two models of this floating around, it's a dumb printer: no on-board processor, and the only RAM is a buffer to print the next bit of the page. The 'Windows Driver' is actually the entire print engine, which tells the printer exactly what to print where. Your computer does all the rendering. (The advantage to this was that, when I upgraded from a 486 to a P133, my printer got faster... :-)
In order to use it with Win2K (and Linux), I bought a $50 P133, installed Win95, and set that machine up as a Print Server. The SuperScript drivers allow you to print PostScript, but I just sent PCL5 at the box, and it worked well. It was fun using a Win95 machine as a front-end to my printer so I could print from Linux. That's about your only bet at this point.
Second: These questions really don't belong on Slashdot. Please quit posting them.
---sheath
I just finished building my Windows 2000 system with new HD,RAM,CDR,VID. The only problem is that I can't get my Adlib Gold card to work. Can somebody tell me exactly where I can obtain drivers. Actually I would prefer it if you just came to my house and installed them for me too. When you stop by, maybe you could show me how to use this weird "Start" button thingy. Thanks.
DISCLAIMER: For those of you that will post serious responses, it's something called sarcasm. Look it up before replying.
I got given one of these the other day... its a nice A3 sized dot matrix printer... good quality also... though I found XP doesn't support it either. Oh well, I got it connected to a freebsd boxen now which is running as a print server.