Title: Major Printer Administration Tasks
1Major Printer Administration Tasks
- Managing printers
- Managing documents
- Troubleshooting printers
- Performing tasks requiring the Manage Printers
permission
2Accessing Printers
3Setting Printer Permissions to Control Access
- Control who can use a printer
- Control who can administer a printer
- Control the level of administration
4Levels of Printer Permissions
- Print
- Manage Documents
- Manage Printers
5Allow or Deny Permissions
- You can allow printer permissions.
- You can deny printer permissions.
- Denied permissions override allowed permissions.
6Assigning Permissions
7Assigning Forms to Paper Trays
8Setting a Separator Page
- A separator page is a file that contains print
device commands. - Separator pages have two functions
- To identify and separate printed documents.
- To switch print devices between print modes.
9Four Separator Pages Included with Windows 2000
- Sysprint.sep
- Pcl.sep
- Pscript.sep
- Sysprtj.sep
10Pausing, Resuming, and Canceling Documents
- Pause the printer, resolve any printing problems,
and resume printing. - Right-click a printer in the Printers folder and
click - Pause Printing.
- Cancel All Documents.
- To resume printing, click Pause Printing to
deselect it.
11Redirecting Documents to a Different Printer
- If a print device is faulty, for example, you can
redirect the print jobs. - You must redirect all print jobs.
- You cannot redirect a specific document.
- Both printers must use the same printer driver.
12Add a New Local Port with UNC Name of New Printer
13Taking Ownership of a Printer
- The owner can no longer manage the printer.
- You can change administrative responsibility for
the printer. - By default, the user who installs a printer owns
it.
14Permission to Take Ownership
- Users who have Manage Printers permission for the
printer - Members of the Administrators and Power Users
groups
15Pausing, Restarting, and Canceling a Document
16Setting Notification, Priority, and Printing Time
- Allows you to control print jobs
- Requires the Manage Documents permission
- Are set on the General tab of the Properties
dialog box for the document
17Introduction
- You can manage printers from any computer running
a Web browser. - The computer does not have to be running Windows
2000. - The computer does not have to have the correct
printer driver. - Management tasks are the same only the interface
is different. - The print server on which the printer resides
must have IIS installed.
18Understanding Web Servers
- Web servers are computers that respond to
requests from a users browser. - Links to a resource on a Web server are known as
Web folders.
19Using a Web Browser to Manage Printers
- Administer printers from any computer running a
Web browser - Customize the interface
- Provides a summary page listing the status of all
printers on a print server - Reports real-time print device data
20Accessing Printers Using a Web Browser
- Open the Web Browser.
- In the Address box, type the following
commandhttp//print_server_name/printers - To gain access to a specific printer
typehttp//print_server_name/printer_share_name
21Examining the Problem
- Verify the print device is plugged in, powered
on, and connected. - For network-interface print devices, verify the
network connection. - Try printing from a different program.
22Examining the Problem (continued)
- Verify that other users print normally. If yes,
- The problem could be insufficient permissions.
- The problem could be lack of a network
connection. - The problem could be with the client computer.
- Verify the print server uses the correct printer
driver for the print device. - Verify the print server is operational, and has
enough disk space for spooling. - Verify the client computer has the correct
printer driver.
23Reviewing Common Printing Problems
- A user receives an Access Denied message when
trying to configure a printer from an
application. - A document does not print completely or comes out
garbled. - The hard disk starts thrashing and the document
doesnt reach the print server.