I'd posted earlier on finding the 'direct' network board for this, but of all the people saying I'd find a $100 part, the only ones I can find cost ~$400. A bit too much money to put into this thing. Sooo, a Celeron 566 desktop and a Windows 2000 later...
I have Windows 2000 set up on the desktop with the eStudio plugged in through the LPT port. Since the workstations using this are all Vista (mostly x64 Business) I ran into a LOT of grief with the .exe only driver version Toshiba provides. Vista will NOT let you choose a port other than LPT or USB for the local install, and will NEED an .inf file to install any other way. When I try the network driver install direct to the share, I got errors. I tried a 'Net Use' redirect for LPT1 which worked for some stations, but Vista keeps disconnecting the port when it's not used. No way to automatically reconnect.
So I installed the LPR service in Win2k and the LPR Port Monitor on the Vista PCs. I set up the LPR port address with a generic HP driver, then switch to the Toshiba driver. Most workstations worked right away with this, so it looks like a success. There's one station that refuses to print at ALL, but I think that's a user-induced issue. The one that boggles me is the supervisor's notebook with Vista Home Premium 32-bit. This one had connected IMMEDIATELY without fighting when I first installed the driver, but has refused to print since those first tests. What it does now is the printer shows up as 'Ready', but as soon as I send a document to it it shows 'Offline' (although the notebook locally shows it as online).
Any ideas? I've tried turning off the firewall with no effect, and it's driver load was identical to the stations that work. It has to have something to do with that damned 'C2' driver wanting communication, but I can't figure out what the difference is that's causing the issues.
Help?
I have Windows 2000 set up on the desktop with the eStudio plugged in through the LPT port. Since the workstations using this are all Vista (mostly x64 Business) I ran into a LOT of grief with the .exe only driver version Toshiba provides. Vista will NOT let you choose a port other than LPT or USB for the local install, and will NEED an .inf file to install any other way. When I try the network driver install direct to the share, I got errors. I tried a 'Net Use' redirect for LPT1 which worked for some stations, but Vista keeps disconnecting the port when it's not used. No way to automatically reconnect.
So I installed the LPR service in Win2k and the LPR Port Monitor on the Vista PCs. I set up the LPR port address with a generic HP driver, then switch to the Toshiba driver. Most workstations worked right away with this, so it looks like a success. There's one station that refuses to print at ALL, but I think that's a user-induced issue. The one that boggles me is the supervisor's notebook with Vista Home Premium 32-bit. This one had connected IMMEDIATELY without fighting when I first installed the driver, but has refused to print since those first tests. What it does now is the printer shows up as 'Ready', but as soon as I send a document to it it shows 'Offline' (although the notebook locally shows it as online).
Any ideas? I've tried turning off the firewall with no effect, and it's driver load was identical to the stations that work. It has to have something to do with that damned 'C2' driver wanting communication, but I can't figure out what the difference is that's causing the issues.
Help?
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