โApr-06-2015 11:45 AM
โApr-10-2015 07:06 PM
joebedford wrote:My laptop uses WiFi, my wife's desktop upstairs uses WiFi, my printer uses WiFi, my webcams use WiFi all through my $50 WiFi router which then connects, via an ethernet cable, to my cable company modem. The cable company only "sees" that I have one device. It all works perfectly and my wife and I can share the one printer.
...I use WiFi for both my printers, neither of which is near the router. Both work perfectly....
Reese Dual Cam Straight Line HP Sway Control
โApr-10-2015 04:53 AM
thebat68 wrote:
MOST of the info here is correct, however, as a 20 year computer tech. I would recommend NOT using wifi to hook up the printers. Hard wire the printer to the router (since you normally don't move printers around) and then use the wifi for your laptop. Although wifi works a lot of the time for printing it is still flaky and I would avoid it where I could and you can simply have your router in close proximity to the printer.
โApr-09-2015 06:32 PM
โApr-08-2015 11:14 AM
AllegroD wrote:monkey44 wrote:AllegroD wrote:
If you are going hard wire, you don't even need a docking station for a single printer, if the laptop and the printer have USB. One USB cable solves that.
Need two printers, and two HD monitors (large screen) at least.
What I'm trying to accomplish ::
Bring my field laptop in to the office, plug into Monitors and printers to process and print images. But, I don't want to always transfer data back and forth from the laptop to an office set-up.
So, thought if I could Dock the laptop, and then use wireless keyboard (rather then laptop keyboard, which is PITA on a desk ... then I could use the laptop to plug in, and won't have all the data transfer and update every time I use one or the other.
IF I'm not careful, I create details on one file, then (maybe) forget if it gets transferred -- (I know, I know, label / date it) but using field laptop in a dock to the larger processing system is much easier for the workflow (and storage). Then take the laptop with me.
It's nearly all images - sports and wildlife and some other outdoor stuff.
Seems like you have a pretty fair handle on your needs. With this amount of wires. A docking station makes sense.
โApr-08-2015 07:29 AM
monkey44 wrote:AllegroD wrote:
If you are going hard wire, you don't even need a docking station for a single printer, if the laptop and the printer have USB. One USB cable solves that.
Need two printers, and two HD monitors (large screen) at least.
What I'm trying to accomplish ::
Bring my field laptop in to the office, plug into Monitors and printers to process and print images. But, I don't want to always transfer data back and forth from the laptop to an office set-up.
So, thought if I could Dock the laptop, and then use wireless keyboard (rather then laptop keyboard, which is PITA on a desk ... then I could use the laptop to plug in, and won't have all the data transfer and update every time I use one or the other.
IF I'm not careful, I create details on one file, then (maybe) forget if it gets transferred -- (I know, I know, label / date it) but using field laptop in a dock to the larger processing system is much easier for the workflow (and storage). Then take the laptop with me.
It's nearly all images - sports and wildlife and some other outdoor stuff.
โApr-08-2015 06:55 AM
โApr-08-2015 06:39 AM
โApr-07-2015 08:22 PM
AllegroD wrote:
If you are going hard wire, you don't even need a docking station for a single printer, if the laptop and the printer have USB. One USB cable solves that.
โApr-07-2015 05:45 PM
โApr-07-2015 04:52 PM
โApr-07-2015 04:29 PM
wa8yxm wrote:
...
Intresting what shows up when I hit QUOTE is what I typed but it is DIFFERENT from what was in the message... Will edit the original message I typed.
โApr-07-2015 02:13 PM
strollin wrote:monkey44 wrote:
Hmmm .. to this technicapped Monkey, seems more trouble than its value. I can go thru a hardwire and use a DOCK to set up everything, then only have one wire to install when I want to hook up the laptop to 'home base" ... so that might be the best way to go based on all the info I have at this time.
Thanks for the input guys M44 ๐
If you only have 1 computer, that may be the best option. However, if you have multiple computers, tablets or phones, a wifi setup using a router would be better.wa8yxm wrote:
When printing
PC ==><=== router ==><===Printer
When Browsing
PC ====><==== Router ==== ><=====ISP ====><=== Internet
IF using Verizon cell as hot spot it is possible they will bill you for all the data that runs through the phone.. EVEN if it is just returning to your printer.
Not sure about other hot spots... When I am using a hot spot my configuration is like this
Printer ---USB---PC---Hotspot.
Verizon, or any other carrier, is only going to bill you for traffic over their network. If you have a Hotspot setup and print without sending any data over their network, no data charges will be incurred.
โApr-07-2015 08:20 AM
โApr-07-2015 06:58 AM
monkey44 wrote:
Hmmm .. to this technicapped Monkey, seems more trouble than its value. I can go thru a hardwire and use a DOCK to set up everything, then only have one wire to install when I want to hook up the laptop to 'home base" ... so that might be the best way to go based on all the info I have at this time.
Thanks for the input guys M44 ๐
wa8yxm wrote:
When printing
PC ==><=== router ==><===Printer
When Browsing
PC ====><==== Router ==== ><=====ISP ====><=== Internet
IF using Verizon cell as hot spot it is possible they will bill you for all the data that runs through the phone.. EVEN if it is just returning to your printer.
Not sure about other hot spots... When I am using a hot spot my configuration is like this
Printer ---USB---PC---Hotspot.