They allow you to stack a large number of envelopes at one time. If you print envelopes only occasionally, then you don't need the envelope feeder attachment.
I would always opt for a network printer. With a USB printer, the PC it's attached to must be turned on in order for someone to print to it. I'm a LAN admin, and even at home I have a networked HP4200 that is available to all of my PC's. Of course you could buy an inexpensive print server as...
jaxx75, the "noisy fan" that I replaced with a Pabst was, in fact a SilenX. I agree with you...the SilenX has a good airflow and is quite quiet. But, if you can live with the reduced airflow of the Pabst, it's nearly inaudible.
I just replaced a noisy 80mm fan with a 12db Pabst fan. It's the quietest fan I've ever heard -- albeit less airflow. I bought it from www.endpcnoise.com. Really made a difference for me.
Since the 9050 is a laser printer, it sounds like the fuser unit is turning off prematurely. First the laser printer lays down the toner (finely ground plastic) on the paper, then the heat from the fuser unit melts it onto the paper.
This is probably an issue for a service technician.
Yes, it should. A client of mine recently bought a new Dell PC with no serial or parallel ports, and they were using an HP Deskjet 722. I bought a parallel to USB converter from Newegg and it worked perfectly.
Hi, Capncaption. In the past I had used an HP LaserJet 5 printer via parallel cable with XP without a problem. I can offer two suggestions.
First, there are different types of parallel ports. The type of port you have is set in BIOS. There is PS/2, EPP and ECP (read about them here...
There are certainly data recovery companies that could retrieve the data, but they're quite expensive. If the drive wasn't spinning at all, I'd suggest freezing it and then trying it -- an old trick to get a stuck hard drive moving again. Even as a slave drive, I doubt it would be accessible...
Sounds like it. Anytime a hard drive makes a clicking noise, particularly at a regular interval, something isn't right. As a LAN Administrator, it's been my experience that a non-booting hard drive that clicks is a dead hard drive.
If you open Task Manager, there is a button that says Change Password. You then have the option of changing the password on both the local machine and network at the same time.
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