Mike: I am wondering, how much ram is in your LJIII? I think maybe I am hitting the top of my printer's physical memory. I don't know how much it has, I just picked it up in an HP refurb shop for $65. Do you know if there is anyway to make the lpd spool the data in such a way that it won't send more than my printer can fit into ram at one time? (I thought that's what the filter was for, but obviously not....) The printer works liek a champ is <gasp> Windows </gasp>, but gosh darnit, I'd like to print my stuff out in linux...
Thanks for your help. Matt Mike Werner wrote: > Matt wrote: > > I am trying desparately to get my HP Laser II to work in linux. I have > > to have somthing to print out all these bloody HOWTOs ;o) > > > > I used both apsfilter and Redhat Printtool to get it to print, but it > > seems to only want to print about 1/2 the page at a time. So when I > > print one page, I get two pages: the first one has the top half of the > > document, the second has the bottom half of the document... It's really > > veryfrustrating, and I'd like to figure out how to get it to work. IF > > anyone has experience with this printer and linux printing at all, I'd > > really like to hear it. > > I've got an HP LJIII here. As I remember the II and the III are very > similar, so hopefully this'll help. I'm using magicfilter and have > the LJIII working perfectly. I used magicfilterconfig to set up my > printcap. So my first suggestion would be dump the printtool - them > RedHat GUI config tools have never worked worth a damn. Then I'd say > remove apsfilter and install magicfilter - I seem to remember trying > apsfilter first, and never could get it to work. > > I can't guarantee that magicfilter will work with an LJII, but it works > very nicely here with an LJIII. Should be at least worth trying. > -- > Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want to go today?" > | "As far from Redmond as possible!" > '91 GS500E | > Morgantown WV | Only dead fish go with the flow. > > -- > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null