>>With a good quality printer, all you need is an off-the-shelf "printserver"<<
My Windows 7-era Brother printer supposedly is compatible with a HP LaserJet III. If I can figure out DOS networking (it's been awhile), I'll give the print server option a try. Thx. ________________________________ From: Frantisek Rysanek <frantisek.rysa...@post.cz> Sent: Saturday, July 27, 2024 10:26 AM To: Michael Perry <spookyb...@outlook.com>; freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net <freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net> Subject: Re: [Freedos-user] Printing to USB Printers Microsoft Network client for MS-DOS can produce a local LPT device that gets redirected over the MS networking stuff (CIFS/SMB over TCP/IP) to a server. Which can be Windows or Linux. The next question is, what species of an animal your USB printer is. Decent printers accept popular print job formats such as PCL or PostScript. Old printers could often also print raw TXT. Cheap USB printers either need host-based software to control them, or use obscure print job formats. (or the printer actually has an Ethernet port built in). For cheap USB printers, chances are that you will find a driver for Linux, interoperable with CUPS, which can accept jobs from Samba. CUPS with a HW-specific printer driver can take print jobs in some open data format and spoonfeed them to the retarded USB printer in its obscure native format. I.e. CUPS can work as a print job data format converter. You won't get this functionality in native DOS. In DOS, you need a printer that supports some data format that you can produce from your app. BTW the Samba service (daemon) in Linux or BSD can also hand over print jobs to the "legacy" BSD style print service called "lpd", which is not much consolation / advantage in this scenario. Frank To: "freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net" <freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net> Date sent: Sat, 27 Jul 2024 13:41:46 +0000 Subject: [Freedos-user] Printing to USB Printers From: Michael Perry via Freedos-user <freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net> Send reply to: "Discussion and general questions about FreeDOS." <freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net> Copies to: Michael Perry <spookyb...@outlook.com> Using FreeDOS 1.3 on bare metal. Yes, I know that USB came well after DOS's golden years. All of the parallel to USB adapters I've seen require Windows drivers. I tried USBPRINT without success (although USBDRIVE works great to copy files to a UBS drive.) And I'm not interested in running virtual DOS machine in Linux. What workarounds - if any - are there to printing on today's USB Printers?
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