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Wireless Home Networking - Index of

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84<br />

Part II: Making Plans<br />

all computers on the network can potentially print to either printer. Or perhaps<br />

you just want to sit by the pool with your wireless laptop and still be<br />

able to print to the printer up in your bedroom; it’s easy with a networkattached<br />

printer.<br />

You can also share other peripherals, such as network-aware scanners and<br />

fax machines. Leading manufacturers <strong>of</strong> digital imaging equipment (such as<br />

Hewlett-Packard) <strong>of</strong>fer feature-rich, multiple-function peripherals that combine<br />

an inkjet or laser printer with a scanner, copier, telephone, answering<br />

machine, and fax machine. HP and Brother both <strong>of</strong>fer wireless printers that<br />

make adding a shared printer to your network simple and quick. If you<br />

already have a printer, you can find wireless print servers such as the HP<br />

Jetdirect ew2400 802.11g <strong>Wireless</strong> Print Server to convert your wired printer<br />

to a wireless printer.<br />

Here are two ways to share printers over a wired or wireless network:<br />

� Connect to a computer: The easiest and cheapest way to connect a<br />

printer to the network is to connect a printer to one <strong>of</strong> the computers<br />

on the network. Windows enables you to share any printer connected<br />

to any Windows computer on the network. (For more on this topic, read<br />

Chapter 10.) The computer to which the printer is connected has to be<br />

running for any other computers on the network to use the printer.<br />

Similarly, if you’re using Apple computers, any computer connected to<br />

the network can print to a printer that’s connected to one <strong>of</strong> the computers<br />

on the network.<br />

� Use a print server: Another way to add a printer is through a print server.<br />

As we mention earlier, several hardware manufacturers produce print<br />

server devices that enable you to connect one or more printers directly<br />

to the network. Some <strong>of</strong> these devices connect via a network cable, and<br />

others are wireless. Many high-end printers even have print server<br />

options installed inside the printer cabinet. The cost for a home use,<br />

stand-alone network print server has come down a lot in the past few<br />

years, but printers with Wi-Fi built in tend to be at the high end <strong>of</strong> the<br />

price range. Surprisingly, some manufacturers bundle a print server with<br />

their wireless router at little or no additional cost. If you shop around,<br />

you can easily find a wireless AP, cable, or DSL router and print server<br />

bundled in one device.<br />

You should be able to get your home network printer connections for free.<br />

Obviously, it doesn’t cost anything to connect a printer to a computer that’s<br />

already connected to the network. Several manufacturers also include a print<br />

server for free with other network devices. If you don’t need one <strong>of</strong> those<br />

devices, just connect the printer you want to share to one <strong>of</strong> the computers<br />

on your home network.<br />

Figure 4-3 depicts a home network with one printer connected to one <strong>of</strong> the<br />

PCs on the network and another printer connected to a wireless Internet gateway,<br />

which is a device that bundles a wireless AP and an Ethernet/cable/DSL

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