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I stated at the very beginning of this topic that the model of printer was the HP Laserjet 4M/Plus. It's a model that could (and hopefully still can) accommodate a variety of connection interfaces. Do appreciate that Series 4 printers from HP are nothing like Series 4000. The 4 Series are different, earlier beasts.
I've managed to force a test page from "MIO". But it doesn't really help much. It just states that the LAN environment is Ethernet multi-protocol, that the I/O card is ready, and that the IP address is 0.0.0.0.
I bought the printer in 1994. I believe it came with several sets of floppies and, for networking, you used those floppies to install appropriate software depending on whether you wished to operate via Windows Workgroup, Windows NT, Novell LAN, Sun, Unix, etc. I've long since lost those floppies, though. I think they were, in part, for running under Windows 3.1 and under DOS. But this model of printer went on to be used in professional and business circles, in workgroup setups, in the wider world for many more years. I've managed to keep mine going for the last 16 years or so, but have never used it in networked mode hitherto. The trouble is that, in that time, implementation methods for home networking have changed. So, basically what I'm needing is some sort of walkthrough wizard. I feel sure that such a wizard would have been produced for networkable printers like these in the late 90s and even up until just a few years ago. And looking around the HP website, I've not found anything concerning JetDirect that I could use.
Sometimes the semantics can get in the way, so just let me define the setup I'm after. It's one where a separate printer server will not be required. The printer is neither attached directly to the WinXP PC nor the Mac, instead it's attached to the router's hub. So, printing is to be performed via that hub, from either the PC or the Mac. In that context, the printer will be shared. However, the impression I get is that Microsoft's definition of 'shared' is something different. Anyways, the printer will somehow need to be assigned an address such as 192.168.0.3 or 192.168.0.4 (since 192.168.0.1 is that of the router itself, and 192.168.0.2 is the existing PC. The Mac isn't involved yet, but will be in due course). Currently, the router and PC are set up for DHCP, so the previously-mentioned addresses stem from the DHCP allocation.
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