Sharing an Apple Printer

edmoy at violet.berkeley.edu edmoy at violet.berkeley.edu
Sun Jul 16 04:03:23 AEST 1989


In article <58710 at linus.UUCP> rad at mbunix (Dramstad) writes:
>In article <741 at hutto.UUCP> henry at hutto.UUCP (Henry Melton) writes:
>>I have a Appletalk printer connected to a MicroVaxII via Alisaprint
>>and a kinetics box.  This gives good service both as a spooler for the
>>Mac users and as a postscript printer for the VMS users.  I now would
>>like to add this printing service for a Sun 3 that is connected via
>>TCP/IP.
>
>	Yes, you could install TOPS on the Sun.  In addition to giving
>you TOPS file services for your Macs on the Sun, it allows you to
>create line printer (sic) queues that point to your AppleTalk-connected
>LaserWriters.  I think you're probably talking about less than $1K to
>do this,too.  
>
>	Also, because of the Berkeley/Sun remote line printer
>capabilities, other Suns or BSD-derivative Unix boxes on your net can
>also get to the Mac's laser printers.  I bounce my Ultrix printouts off
>a Sun to a laser printer just outside my door -- the same one I use for
>my Mac printouts.  I like it a lot.

You can also get the Columbia AppleTalk Package (CAP), version 5.0, FREE,
from anonumous ftp from sumex-aim.stanford.edu (in the info-mac/unix)
directory or from cunixc.cc.columbia.edu.  Here at UC Berkeley, we have
quite a few sites, that use CAP, bith for print spooling and file
serving.  It is even a support service that we in the Computer Center
provide for Unix machines that have nearby AppleTalk networks.

CAP also uses the standard lpr facilities of BSD Unix, so you can make
one machine the "direct connection" to the AppleTalk-connected LaserWriter
and indirectly spool from other UNIX hosts.

Edward Moy				Principal Programmer - Macintosh & Unix
Workstation Support Services		Workstation Software Support Group
University of California
Berkeley, CA  94720

edmoy at violet.Berkeley.EDU
ucbvax!violet!edmoy



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