Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/12/13
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Brian congrats on the new family member. Two comments for you. 1. Mrs Reid really considered the setup of a new printer on your home network as a suitable activity on her birthday?? The lady must be a saint. 2. Please publish the address of this printer and I'll send some print jobs your way ;-) Cheers Hoppy -----Original Message----- From: lug-bounces+hoppyman=bigpond.net.au@leica-users.org [mailto:lug-bounces+hoppyman=bigpond.net.au@leica-users.org] On Behalf Of Brian Reid Sent: Thursday, 14 December 2006 16:34 To: Leica Users Group Subject: Re: [Leica] My Epson Stylus Pro 3800 has arrived from Utah Well, my wife wanted some grandchild pictures, so setting up the Epson 3800 on her birthday ended up being a marriage-friendly activity. The photographic quality of this printer is exactly what you want and expect it to be. I'm not going to say anything about that. What I want to report on is its systems engineering, which is absolutely top flight. The automatic switching between Photo Black and Matte Black is great. It decides which ink to use based on the paper that you tell it you are using (here's a screen dump of the MacOS paper select menu) http://reid.org/~brian/misc/e3800PaperMenu.png This next screen dump will mean something to you MacOS types, PC folks are welcome to listen in. A new entry in the print menu is "Supply Levels": http://reid.org/~brian/misc/e3800PrintMenu.png (Never mind that it's in there twice; that hurts nothing except the programmer's pride). If you select it during the print dialog, here's what you get: http://reid.org/~brian/misc/e3800MacOS.png Yup: you can check on ink levels before actually launching a print. Because the printer is Ethernet connected, you can manage and configure it in a web browser. I kinda wimped out and used Bonjour to configure mine. I wanted to be hardass and use IPP, but I did have some wine with dinner. And Bonjour just sort of works. The network interface is at home with DHCP, DDNS (rather over the top, I'd say), and UPnP. I made a static DHCP entry for it and it got all of its config information from the DHCP server (which is how I like to do it). Once it's on the net, you do the rest in a browser: http://reid.org/~brian/misc/e3800netconf.png This is a very nice printer and a very nice home-network component. Brian