hel <
hst...@optusnet.com.au> writes:
> Thank you Charlie for your reply.
>
> What you suggested is exactly what I was thinking after running in to
> more and never ending problems.
>
> Helmut
Ongoing hardware support is never an easy step :-(
One solution you might try to look into is to use a different, older,
computer as a print server. For linux, HP generally has something
approaching good support for many printers (whether the HP software
has desirable consequences as far as intrusiveness is concerned is
a separate issue), and the same goes for many other brands:
Setting up a CUPS (common UNIX printing system) server on an older
machine running some version of linux should be enough to keep
printers supported which no longer have drivers for Windows versions
you might be running.
The printers can then be network-shared (by CUPS) and seen from the
Windows machine(s).
I should add that older devices will be supported on linux forever,
and drivers continually improved as development continues.
> On Tue, 30 Oct 2012 07:08:51 +0000, Charlie+ <
cha...@xxx.net> wrote:
>
> >On Mon, 29 Oct 2012 17:39:16 +1100, hel <
hst...@optusnet.com.au> wrote
> >as underneath:
> >
> >
> >>
> >>I am upgrading to Win 8 but until now I could not find a suitable
> >>drive for HP M1005.
> >>
> >>Anyone has had the same problem and found a solution.
> >>
> >>Thanks for sharing your wisdom.
> >>
> >No full depth upgrade drivers will be available from HP, Canon or anyone
> >else - it is the policy of mfg of cheap hardware not to provide them -
> >upgrading OS is the easy and cheap bit, dont do it if you dont have to.
> >Getting new software and hardware to get everything working as before is
> >the expensive and time consuming part. Here still using XP until
> >something breaks and forces change.
--
Gernot Hassenpflug