Laptop printers do not have to be wireless. You can have a USB cord that goes from the printer to your laptop that you can unplug when you're not using it.
Wireless compatibility is a network issue, not a funciton of your computer or your printer. If your printer has the same network capabilities, yes, it's compatible.
Your problem is not the printer, the problem is availability of windows drivers for the printer. If you find appropriate windows drivers supporting the printer you should not have problems using your laptop with the printer*. *I have assumed that you have windows installed on your laptop.
yes
The printer is more than one meter from the laptop. The infared range is about one meter.
No, the HP Photosmart C4280 is not a wireless printer. It is a multi-function printer that offers printing, scanning, and copying capabilities, but it does not have built-in wireless connectivity. To use this printer wirelessly, you would need to connect it to a wireless print server or use a direct wireless printing method such as Wi-Fi Direct or Bluetooth.
A good brand that is a wireless, all-in-one printer would be Canon. Another good brand is Epson. Kodak also sell a printer that is all-in-one and wireless.
Yes probably. However, there's probably some more logical ways of connecting your desktop to your printer. 1. Does your printer have an ethernet port? If so, use this to connect to your switch or desktop NIC directly. 2. Does your desktop have a wireless card? Use this and connect to your printer. 3. If not 1 or 2, setup a wireless access point or get a wireless router with some ethernet ports. You'll easily be able to connect all your devices this way.
Depends on if the printer is wireless and if you are using a wireless cable. Most HP printers use a standard USB to printer cord. However, we would have to know the exact make and model of your computer to help you out
There are four widely used systems and it largely depends on what you're printer supports. Bluetooth printers are available. So if your printer and laptop support bluetooth, it should be fairly straightforward to connect them. Wi-fi printers are also available, these are slightly more awkward to connect to the laptop as the intention is that wi-fi connects to a WAP (wireless access point), not all operating systems allow you to connect a laptop direct to a printer via wi-fi. A third option is wireless USB; this has two meanings: There is a wireless USB standard, for which products are starting to emerge. If your printer supports wireless USB, then that is the way to go. An alternative is a wireless USB extender, these are pairs of devices which can be used to interconnect devices. The fourth technology carries USB or UTP on the mains wiring; adaptors plug into mains sockets and allows you to interconnect devices using the main wiring.
it would all ready be wireless
It's a printer that isn't connected to a computer, laptop or other device with cables. That can be picked up by a device via bluetooth or other wireless communication and print something that the devices requests.
All laptops can break, whether they have wireless or not. A laptop with integrated wireless is no more or less likely to break than without.