• Printer and Mac wireless connection

    From Daniel Cohen@21:1/5 to All on Fri Mar 1 19:34:08 2019
    I am wondering about changing my printer from wired (USB) to wireless.
    However, the printer sees only my 2.4GHz network, whereas my computer is connected to the 5GHz. The router itself, of course, provides both
    networks but with different names.

    Is there an easy way to print in this setup? A third-party addition
    would be acceptable. Maybe I'll just have to stick to USB, but I would
    rather like to get rid of cables.

    --
    <http://www.decohen.com>
    The Labyrinth of the Heart: Changed Myths for Changing Lives
    book and e-book <http://www.decohen.com/labyrinth.htm>
    Send e-mail to the Reply-To address, not the From address.

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  • From Christian@21:1/5 to Daniel Cohen on Fri Mar 1 23:04:53 2019
    Daniel Cohen <dcohenspam@talktalk.net> wrote:

    I am wondering about changing my printer from wired (USB) to wireless. However, the printer sees only my 2.4GHz network, whereas my computer is connected to the 5GHz. The router itself, of course, provides both
    networks but with different names.

    Is there an easy way to print in this setup? A third-party addition
    would be acceptable. Maybe I'll just have to stick to USB, but I would
    rather like to get rid of cables.

    What is the problem?

    The printer needs a connection to your WLAN router, and the Mac needs a connection to your WLAN router. It does not matter on what frequency the individual devices connect to the router - it is important _that_ they
    connect.

    It is much like if you have two Ethernet cables going to your router,
    one is yellow and the other one is red.

    The only thing is that both need to be in the same _logical_ network,
    which is determined by the internal IP address and the netmask.

    In a "normal" configuration, with an internal IP address range of 192.168.xx.yy, the netmask should be 255.255.255.0. All devices must
    then have identical addresses in the first three segments of the IP
    address (192.168.xx), while yy needs to be different for each device.
    Normally, this is handled by the DHCP server, so you don't even need to
    care about it.

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  • From Daniel Cohen@21:1/5 to Christian on Sat Mar 2 08:31:14 2019
    Christian <christian180801@ghanart.org> wrote:

    Daniel Cohen <dcohenspam@talktalk.net> wrote:

    I am wondering about changing my printer from wired (USB) to wireless. However, the printer sees only my 2.4GHz network, whereas my computer is connected to the 5GHz. The router itself, of course, provides both
    networks but with different names.

    Is there an easy way to print in this setup? A third-party addition
    would be acceptable. Maybe I'll just have to stick to USB, but I would rather like to get rid of cables.

    What is the problem?

    Quite possibly no problem. I did not understand wireless networking that
    well, and didn't want to try without getting guidance. I'll try later
    today.


    The printer needs a connection to your WLAN router, and the Mac needs a connection to your WLAN router. It does not matter on what frequency the individual devices connect to the router - it is important _that_ they connect.

    It is much like if you have two Ethernet cables going to your router,
    one is yellow and the other one is red.

    The only thing is that both need to be in the same _logical_ network,
    which is determined by the internal IP address and the netmask.

    In a "normal" configuration, with an internal IP address range of 192.168.xx.yy, the netmask should be 255.255.255.0. All devices must
    then have identical addresses in the first three segments of the IP
    address (192.168.xx), while yy needs to be different for each device. Normally, this is handled by the DHCP server, so you don't even need to
    care about it.

    With two different named networks (one for each frequency) it seemed
    likely to me that something extra might be needed to get the two to communicate. Evidently I was wrong.
    --
    <http://www.decohen.com>
    The Labyrinth of the Heart: Changed Myths for Changing Lives
    book and e-book <http://www.decohen.com/labyrinth.htm>
    Send e-mail to the Reply-To address, not the From address.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Daniel Cohen@21:1/5 to Daniel Cohen on Sat Mar 2 11:00:44 2019
    Daniel Cohen <dcohenspam@talktalk.net> wrote:

    Quite possibly no problem. I did not understand wireless networking that well, and didn't want to try without getting guidance. I'll try later
    today.

    And now that I have tried, all went well. I am grateful for your
    reassurance that problems weren't likely to appear.

    Wireless printing seems slower than direct via USB, but it's good to be
    able to get rid of the cable, and also to print from my iPhone if I
    want.
    --
    <http://www.decohen.com>
    The Labyrinth of the Heart: Changed Myths for Changing Lives
    book and e-book <http://www.decohen.com/labyrinth.htm>
    Send e-mail to the Reply-To address, not the From address.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christian@21:1/5 to Daniel Cohen on Sat Mar 2 21:08:22 2019
    Daniel Cohen <dcohenspam@talktalk.net> wrote:

    And now that I have tried, all went well. I am grateful for your
    reassurance that problems weren't likely to appear.

    Wireless printing seems slower than direct via USB, but it's good to be
    able to get rid of the cable, and also to print from my iPhone if I
    want.

    Good to hear. Have fun printing!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)