M
Marty
I have a client that is running a Domain in one location
that has a dedicated Terminal Server. In a remote office
they are running a member server network. All printers
in the main office work properly using either terminal
server session printers for the ones hooked up to the
workstation or the network printers that are running on
print servers.
I tried hooking up the remote office's printer both
through a print server and through a parallel port
connection on a workstation. When hooked up to the
parallel port, a terminal server session printer was
created, but nothing would print.
The only thing I can think of is the IP range for the
main office, the one I am responsible for, is 192.168.1.x
and the person that setup the network in the remote
location used the same IP range.
The only other thing I could think of doing was setup the
remote office as a subdomain on the tree and that way I
could have the printer in the active directory as part of
the subdomain.
Any ideas would be greatly appreciated.
Marty Mash
that has a dedicated Terminal Server. In a remote office
they are running a member server network. All printers
in the main office work properly using either terminal
server session printers for the ones hooked up to the
workstation or the network printers that are running on
print servers.
I tried hooking up the remote office's printer both
through a print server and through a parallel port
connection on a workstation. When hooked up to the
parallel port, a terminal server session printer was
created, but nothing would print.
The only thing I can think of is the IP range for the
main office, the one I am responsible for, is 192.168.1.x
and the person that setup the network in the remote
location used the same IP range.
The only other thing I could think of doing was setup the
remote office as a subdomain on the tree and that way I
could have the printer in the active directory as part of
the subdomain.
Any ideas would be greatly appreciated.
Marty Mash