Welcome to the latest edition of Ask the Geek. As I mentioned in my last column, this week we are going to start a series on using the Common Unix Printing System (CUPS), which can introduce a ...
This is the second article in what will be a four-part series on the current state of 3D printing compared to how things were three years ago when I wrote my first series on 3D printing. Of course, ...
eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More. The Linux Foundation last week announced the free ...
This is the last article in a four-part series on the current state of 3D printing. In the first part, I gave an overall introduction to differences in 3D printing since I wrote my original articles ...
My own saga should prove educational. I wanted to use the Canon iP3000 photo printer, part of the company's PIXMA printer series. But I was unable to find a Linux driver for the iP3000 at the Canon ...
I'm having trouble printing from Linux to a university networked printer. I have lpr setup and it works, but only in Firefox. From the university tech support site, they list the following ...
Our 2003 Windows terminal client server can connect with any Windows client via the Internet – it provides connection, sound and printing services back to the client. We have a Linux client that we ...
I've googled, read the howtos, checked the BIOS, and asked on the Ars Linux chat room. This one has me stumped.<BR><BR>I have a Canon BJC-2010 printer; I'm running Gentoo on a 2.4.19 kernel. The ...
In the last edition of Ask the Geek, I talked about the basics of the Common Unix Printing System (CUPS). The CUPS software is unique because it offers a universal, standards-compliant printing system ...
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