I realise that this is possibly a silly question, but are there likely to be any conflicts/problems
connecting two printers to the same pc using WiFi ?
I realise that this is possibly a silly question, but are there likely to
be any conflicts/problems
connecting two printers to the same pc using WiFi ?
I realise that this is possibly a silly question, but are there likely to be any conflicts/problems
connecting two printers to the same pc using WiFi ?
The conventional way to do this is to connect each printer by WiFi to
your router. The router will then give each printer a unique IP
address
I realise that this is possibly a silly question, but are there likely to be any conflicts/problems
connecting two printers to the same pc using WiFi ?
scbs29 wrote:
I realise that this is possibly a silly question, but are there likely to be any conflicts/problems
connecting two printers to the same pc using WiFi ?
Well, I've done it successfully under Win10. Two different entries
appear in Devices and Printers; with attendant print queues etc being >produced.
I've also had two entries for the same printer; one for wifi and one for
USB cable.
What make of printers do you have?
Ed
I realise that this is possibly a silly question, but are there likely to be any conflicts/problems
connecting two printers to the same pc using WiFi ?
scbs29 <scbs29@fred.talktalk.net> wrote:
I realise that this is possibly a silly question, but are there likely to
be any conflicts/problems
connecting two printers to the same pc using WiFi ?
I don’t see why there would be a problem, but anything is possible.
Your router should assign the printers different ip addresses.
On 17/06/2024 09:07, Hank Rogers wrote:
scbs29 <scbs29@fred.talktalk.net> wrote:
I realise that this is possibly a silly question, but are there
likely to
be any conflicts/problems
connecting two printers to the same pc using WiFi ?
I don’t see why there would be a problem, but anything is possible.
Your router should assign the printers different ip addresses.
And if these printers don't have wifi or an ethernet port?
Perhaps they are both USB only.
Graham J wrote on Mon, 17 Jun 2024 11:12:59 +0100 :
The conventional way to do this is to connect each printer by WiFi to
your router. The router will then give each printer a unique IP
address
That.
scbs29 wrote:
I realise that this is possibly a silly question, but are there likely
to be any conflicts/problems
connecting two printers to the same pc using WiFi ?
The conventional way to do this is to connect each printer by WiFi to
your router. The router will then give each printer a unique IP
address, and depending on the router this IP address will remain the
same when the power to both printers and router is removed and restored.
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