Networked Versus Local Printers
Depending on organizational needs, it may be unnecessary to assign
one printer to each member of your organization. Such overlap in
expenditure can eat into allotted budgets, leaving less capital for
other necessities. While local printers attached via parallel or USB
cable to every workstation are an ideal solution, it is not often
feasible economically.
Printer manufacturers have addressed this need by developing
departmental (or workgroup) printers. These
machines are usually durable, fast, and have long-life
consumables. Workgroup printers usually are attached to a print server,
a standalone device (such as a reconfigured workstation) which handles
print jobs and routes output to the proper printer when available
(although, some printers include built-in or add-on network interfaces
that eliminate the need for a dedicated print server). Print servers can
use either the Internet Printing Protocol (IPP)
available in Red Hat Linux via the Common UNIX Printing
System (CUPS) or through Samba. Samba is particularly useful
for heterogeneous environments where departments may use different
operating systems. More information about configuring Red Hat Linux for use as a
print server can be found in the Section called Printer Sharing and Access Control.