Workgroup
802.11b and 802.11g
802.11b and 802.11g
You can buy a bulk of all in one printers for a office spac at www.castleink.com/_a-AllInOnePrinters.html. ANother good site is www.epinions.com › Computers & Internet › Printers
hpsetup is a connection that appears from all printers and strangely has no internet connectivity. Trying to connect to the internet from this is futile and will not work.
No reason why not - provided you have the necessary driver for the printer installed on the notebook. Almost all printers use the standard USB connection these days. Windows development usually means most of the popular printers are already supported by the operating system.
my answer-> Its an all-in-oneanswer b4 mine->There are two ways to make that connection. You either try finding a paraller connection splitter, ie, a box that has one input parallel connection (for the printer) and two output parallel connections (to each of the computers) and somehow toggles between the computers when needed, or you install the printer in one of the computers and establish a network connection between the computers with printer sharing.
The sentence 'Computers and printers are standard equipment in most classrooms' is a compound sentence because it has more than one subject, "Computers and printers".
Printers connected to the Internet that provide printing services to others are called "cloud printers." These printers allow users to send print jobs remotely via the Internet, enabling printing from anywhere without needing a direct connection to the printer. Popular services include Google Cloud Print (which has been discontinued) and various other cloud printing solutions offered by printer manufacturers.
A network is ANY connection of computers or other devices.Companies can have company-spanning networks; similarly, you can connect two or more computers at your home. A while ago, such networks were normally NOT connected to the Internet; the networks were set up to share resources such as printers, file servers, etc. Even today, every company and home that connects computers has its own network - thus, the Internet can be considered as a "network of networks", i.e., smaller networks, connected into a larger one. Often, the boundary between one network and another one is considered to be the router or equivalent device. Thus, the ADSL device I use at home, to connect to the Internet, connects three different networks: * An Ethernet network (which uses cables) * A Wi-Fi network (the wireless network) * The ADSL network (the connection to the ISP).
LAN means Local Area Network. It can connect computers within buildings and a limited area and can also share resources like printers.
Dot Matrix printers are the most common impact printers used with personal computers. Daisy Wheel printers are sometimes used as well.
I have found the best math worksheets that are printable at the mathprint dot com site. They have worksheets that are compatible to all computers and printers.