On 2/14/23 07:58, Brian wrote:
[...]
Brother HL-L2320D L2300D best budget laser printer review
https://www.youtube.com › watch
7:51
A quick demonstration and review of the Brother HL-L2320D laser printer.Buy it
on Amazon here: http://amzn.to/2haHDsdOr buy the similar ...
YouTube · DarkStoneCastle · Dec 21, 2016
So... yeah, I guess we're saying that your printer was 5 years old at the
moment you bought it. Or at least, that it was a 5-year-old *design*,
even if that particular printer had been assembled more recently.
The Brother HL-L2320D seems to have come on the market in early
2016. I haven't any idea when Staples decided to stock it.
Now, personally I don't consider a 7-year-old product to be an antique,
but maybe Brian does. I certainly can't speak for him on this topic.
I do not consider a 7-year-old product to be an antique. The
significance of 2016 is that it is four years after the
IPP-over-USB standard was ratified.
Network printers from 2016 almost certainly (always in my
experience) do ship with IPP-over-USB. For some reason USB-only
devices generally do not provide it; it's very hit-and-miss.
I do not know why all vendors (not just Brother) have taken that
decision. It's a real pain as it effectively makes the printer
a legacy model and very much limits how it fits into the Debian
printing ecosystem.
The big scanner/printer has an ip address, but its a lot slower when
using ipv4 to operate it, I wiresharked it back about jessie, and found
why, the cups driver for IPP was sending a bad crc the first 6 times it
tried to wake it up before it decided to send a good crc, so there was a
1 minute time killer just to wake it up. Then it was about a 5 kilobaud
circuit, about a minute a text page. Its at least 5x faster on a usb2
circuit. A ping works in 0.5 milliseconds, but that doesn't wake it up.
Its much faster on a usb circuit.
I made some noise about it at the time, but was ignored. I don't know if
dfu could update its firmware, or if its too old for that.
Cheers, Gene Heskett.
--
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author, 1940)
If we desire respect for the law, we must first make the law respectable.
- Louis D. Brandeis
Genes Web page <http://geneslinuxbox.net:6309/>