network printer

N

netdc

I have a new HP laptop with Vista and am trying to print to a network
printer. The printer is attached to a desktop with XP. The laptop recognizes
the two printers attached to the desktop, HP officejet and Dell inkjet, but
won't connect. Message indicates it needs a driver (INF file?) but can't find
it. I downloaded Dell drivers and tried that, but it won't recognize them. Do
I need to install special drivers on the desktop (XP)? I did receive error
message 0x800f0214 which I can't find in any Microsoft site.
 
M

Malke

netdc said:
I have a new HP laptop with Vista and am trying to print to a network
printer. The printer is attached to a desktop with XP. The laptop
recognizes the two printers attached to the desktop, HP officejet and Dell
inkjet, but won't connect. Message indicates it needs a driver (INF file?)
but can't find it. I downloaded Dell drivers and tried that, but it won't
recognize them. Do I need to install special drivers on the desktop (XP)?
I did receive error message 0x800f0214 which I can't find in any Microsoft
site.

1. You need the correct Vista drivers for each printer installed on the
Vista machine. Install the drivers and the printers should be seen during
the installation process.

2. You need to have set up file/printer sharing. Have you done this and are
you able to transfer files both ways?

3. You need to share out the printers connected to the XP machine.

Excellent, thorough, yet easy to understand article about File/Printer
Sharing in Vista. Includes details about sharing printers as well as files
and folders:

http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb727037.aspx

Problems sharing files between computers on a network are generally caused
by 1) a misconfigured firewall; or 2) inadvertently running two firewalls
such as the built-in Windows Firewall and a third-party firewall; and/or 3)
not having identical user accounts and passwords on all Workgroup machines;
4) trying to create shares where the operating system does not permit it.

A. Configure firewalls on all machines to allow the Local Area Network (LAN)
traffic as trusted. With Windows Firewall, this means allowing File/Printer
Sharing on the Exceptions tab. Normally running the Network Setup Wizard on
XP will take care of this for those machines.The only "gotcha" is that this
will turn on the XPSP2 Windows Firewall. If you aren't running a
third-party firewall or have an antivirus with "Internet Worm
Protection" (like Norton 2006/07) which acts as a firewall, then you're
fine. With third-party firewalls, I usually configure the LAN allowance
with an IP range. Ex. would be 192.168.1.0-192.168.1.254. Obviously you
would substitute your correct subnet. Do not run more than one firewall.

B. For ease of organization, put all computers in the same Workgroup. This
is done from the System applet in Control Panel, Computer Name tab.

C. Create matching user accounts and passwords on all machines. You do not
need to be logged into the same account on all machines and the passwords
assigned to each user account can be different; the accounts/passwords just
need to exist and match on all machines. If you wish a machine to boot
directly to the Desktop (into one particular user's account) for
convenience, you can do this. The instructions at this link work for both
XP and Vista:

Configure Windows to Automatically Login (MVP Ramesh) -
http://windowsxp.mvps.org/Autologon.htm

D. If one or more of the computers is XP Pro or Media Center:

1. If you need Pro's ability to set fine-grained permissions, turn off
Simple File Sharing (Folder Options>View tab) and create identical user
accounts/passwords on all computers.

2. If you don't care about using Pro's advanced features, leave the Simple
File Sharing enabled. Simple File Sharing means that Guest (network) is
enabled. This means that anyone without a user account on the target system
can use its resources. This is a security hole but only you can decide if
it matters in your situation.


Malke
 
N

netdc

netdc said:
I have a new HP laptop with Vista and am trying to print to a network
printer. The printer is attached to a desktop with XP. The laptop recognizes
the two printers attached to the desktop, HP officejet and Dell inkjet, but
won't connect. Message indicates it needs a driver (INF file?) but can't find
it. I downloaded Dell drivers and tried that, but it won't recognize them. Do
I need to install special drivers on the desktop (XP)? I did receive error
message 0x800f0214 which I can't find in any Microsoft site.
I receive the message 'file "*.inf" on (unknown) is needed'. I can't resolve
this.
 

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