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Home Page: http://www.seanet.com/~jasonrnorth
If you're not the lead dog, the view never changes
Doubt yourself, and the real world will eat you alive
The world doesn't revolve around you, it revolves around me
No skeletons in the closet; just decomposing corpses
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Dependence is Vulnerability:
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"Open the Pod Bay Doors please, Hal"
"I'm sorry, Dave, I'm afraid I can't do that.."
What differences do you see when the printer is connected, but powered
off at boot time vs. being powered on at boot time?
Paul
Try turning off Plug and Play in the bios.
On some MBs, the header has no polarization for those ribbon
connectors, make sure you're putting it on the right way 'round. On
some older MBs, that can burn out the port, sends power through the
chip to a dead short. Also, did the parallel port cable come with the
MB? There's no real standards for those header connections, another
brand could, and usually did, use different pins for different
signals. Later machines had the parallel port firmly bolted to the MB
and soldered in, no possibility for mistakes.
Since it's a dot matrix, it probably doesn't do the bidirectional
thing like much later lasers and inkjets. What you want to set the
BIOS to is the original AT parallel port specs, you'll have to look
those up, I really don't remember. And turn off any of the fancy
stuff. You'll have a hex I/O address, an IRQ and a third parameter
related to bidirectional stuff. That's the one that needs to be
turned off or set to none or whatever your choice is. Usually the
default setting is for the first printer, if you can discover what
that is. Printer IRQs usually don't share too well, either
If the port is toast, you can probably find an ISA parallel card from
a recycler or surplus joint for cheap. If you've got no slots, but DO
have USB, there are USB->Printer cables available. I paid $10 for
mine, works on all OSes I have that support USB. Was just plug and
play, no fiddling around with IRQs or anything. Box saw the Laserjet,
loaded drivers and away we went. I'd recommend that route instead of
parallel ports, those printer cables run about $30 around here, the
converter cable was way cheaper. Inland was the brand name, from
Microcenter. Make sure the onboard port is disabled if you go that
route, you don't want conflicts.
Stan