Hi there.
This is no longer a problem, I'm just interested if anyone has the time to offer opinions.
I'm fairly new to networking and at the last place I worked we would install new network printers by:
1. Connect a network cable
2. Wait for DHCP to assign an IP address
3. Take a note of the MAC address
4. Reserve the IP Address on the DHCP Server
I have now moved jobs and had to set up my first new printer yesterday. I tried this and although everything SEEMED fine, print jobs would stick in the queue and not print.
So I took a look at how the other printers were set up...
They were all done manually using an IP address keyed into the physical printer. Nothing reserved in DHCP. They were also part of a small sequence of IP Addresses (a 'Scope'?).
So, my questions are:
1. What are the advantages and disdvantages to these two methods?
2. Why didn't what I originally tried work at my new place?
Thanks very much for any help you may give me.
This is no longer a problem, I'm just interested if anyone has the time to offer opinions.
I'm fairly new to networking and at the last place I worked we would install new network printers by:
1. Connect a network cable
2. Wait for DHCP to assign an IP address
3. Take a note of the MAC address
4. Reserve the IP Address on the DHCP Server
I have now moved jobs and had to set up my first new printer yesterday. I tried this and although everything SEEMED fine, print jobs would stick in the queue and not print.
So I took a look at how the other printers were set up...
They were all done manually using an IP address keyed into the physical printer. Nothing reserved in DHCP. They were also part of a small sequence of IP Addresses (a 'Scope'?).
So, my questions are:
1. What are the advantages and disdvantages to these two methods?
2. Why didn't what I originally tried work at my new place?
Thanks very much for any help you may give me.