>> CUPS, install LPRng and configure it to work. But what is interesting >> is that LPRng proved better for a network printer than CUPS: its lpq >> command does what it is supposed to by showing me the printer queue >> status and not merely the local queue status. lprm also works out of >> the box.
I agree that LPRng's model makes more sense when used on network printers (all my printers are networked). >> While it possible that I wasn't using CUPS correctly (I tried!), I >> clearly can use LPRng with far less effort. I wonder then why Debian >> prefers to bundle CUPS as its default print spooler? IIUC the main feature of CUPS is that it lets client applications get a description of the printer's features, so they can give you a nice GUI widget to let you choose simplex/duplex, draft/quality, photo-paper, color/b&w, ... It's really sad that we can't have both. Stefan -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org