I am running Debian 9.11 with a HP Laserjet P3015 Postscript. By
means of rodent-cut-and-paste from a web page, I have on the emacs
screen a file with a combination of English and Greek characters. But
I need a paper copy.
FILE -> PRINT POSTSCRIPT BUFFER renders the Greek characters as
quest
And here I've made a fool of myself yet again. From the documentation:
> The dhcp Method
> This method may be used to obtain network interface configuration via
> stateful DHCPv6 with dhclient. In stateful DHCPv6, the DHCP server is
> responsible for assigning addresses to clients.
> Op
I ended up cheating by having this setup enable both wide-dhcpv6 for the
IP address, and SLAAC for the routing information. It's really odd how
the configuration built into the system doesn't allow it.
/etc/network/interfaces
> auto eth-external
> iface eth-external inet dhcp
> pre-up mod
On Fri 15 Nov 2019 at 12:44:16 -, Dan Purgert wrote:
> mick crane wrote:
> > On 2019-11-14 23:52, Dan Purgert wrote:
> >
> >>> What is more interesting is why a user thinks that the LPD protocol
> >>> gives them something that IPP doesn't.
> >>
> >> Who said that LPR/LPD gave people "somethin
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Hash: SHA256
mick crane wrote:
> On 2019-11-14 23:52, Dan Purgert wrote:
>
>>> What is more interesting is why a user thinks that the LPD protocol
>>> gives them something that IPP doesn't.
>>
>> Who said that LPR/LPD gave people "something" that IPP doesn't?
>
On 2019-11-14 23:52, Dan Purgert wrote:
What is more interesting is why a user thinks that the LPD protocol
gives them something that IPP doesn't.
Who said that LPR/LPD gave people "something" that IPP doesn't?
I'm not really sure about what happens.
Is it that a CUPS server translates what
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