If you are familiar enough with routers to know how to read the specifications, then a well-established online auction site such as eBay would be likely to have the best deal for you on a wireless router for your printer. These sites have safeguards in place to ensure that you are able to get buyer protection.
switch the printer on before the router
No, this is not a wireless printer. If you want, you can wire it into your Ethernet network and then it might work as a wireless printer if the Ethernet connects to a WiFi router.
To connect a printer to a wireless router, it would help to read the instructor's manual then open control panel, select your printer and it's properties and start the set up through there.
One of the more inconvenient procedures that might have to be performed when trying to connect a printer to a wireless router is actually plugging the printer into the router with an Ethernet cable. This step often has to be done when initially setting up a wireless printer. It is necessary because the printer must acquire all of the network information directly through a physical connection before it is able to configure its internal wireless card. Once configured, however, the printer can be disconnected from the wireless router and will be accessible wirelessly to other computers in the network.
Answer:Yes, but you first need a wireless router and your network configured.Next, install the drivers/software for your printer on your computer (check your printer manual for directions)Afterward, configure your printer to the wireless network. (this depends of the type of printer)
If your printer is network capable, it has own print server. Just connect the printer to the router. Then connect the printer as a network printer.
Yes, you can do that. The printer and cellular router should not interfere with each other. If it is a problem you can route the printer through the router.
MAC/PC/printer to router. Router to modem. Modem to wall/internet. Wired or wireless router is optional, same principle.
There are two options. First, you connect the printer to a computer which has a wireless connection and share the printer for network users. Second, if your wireless router supports Print server, you can connect the printer directly to the router and configure print server options in order to get access to the printer through wireless network.
If the printer is connected to another computer via a cable, then you need something for the wireless computer to connect to. It would either have to connect to a wireless router or you could have a wireless card in the other computer and configure the two to talk to each other. But using a router is a far better solution. Then you can setup the printer as shared from the first computer and configure the two comptuers to be in the same workgroup and share it that way.
It needs a wireless card or it should be connected to computer connected to the wireless router you are using for your network.
No it does not, but you must remember that the printer is only capable of working when it is within a certain range of the router. Like a cordless phone, it can only receive a signal if it is withing range of the main phone connection.