T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
158.1 | Small is beautiful! | FOOT::TAYLOR | | Thu Aug 04 1988 11:53 | 10 |
| I think I saw the same note about the large prints but I can't recall
it now. But I do wish people would be a *bit* more considerate and
queue the large prints overnight.
What seems to be the problem though is that ESDP ( who by definition
are always going to be queueing large prints) are also using our
1 LN03 printer. Haven't they got their own?
Janet_who_is_noting_to_this_conference_while_she_waits_for_a_3000+_print_
to_finish_on_the_LN03
|
158.2 | American Express? | NECK::THOMPSON | | Thu Aug 04 1988 18:49 | 6 |
| Does anyone know of a way of accounting for pages printed on devices
driven over a LAN? If it were possible to put some figures to the
amount of printing done by ADG and 'others' then perhaps 'others'
might be encouraged to cough up the cost of providing this service, or
charged enough to go and seek out printers nearer home.
|
158.3 | But large is faster.. | ELBOW::DRAPER | Steve Draper | Fri Aug 05 1988 07:51 | 16 |
| RE: .1
� What seems to be the problem though is that ESDP ( who by definition
� are always going to be queueing large prints) are also using our
� 1 LN03 printer. Haven't they got their own?
LN03 files can be printed on the LPS40 by using the command
$print/queue=ansi_eye <filespec>
N.B. It is also a good idea to add the /NOTIFY qualifier to the
print command. Not only will you be told when your job is completed,
but also if the LPS40 runs out of paper etc while printing your
job.
Steve
|
158.4 | ACCOUNT/TYPE=PRINT | RDGE28::EBDON | | Fri Aug 05 1988 15:31 | 6 |
| RE .2
The standard VMS accounting software handles this.
Terry
|
158.5 | Accountng/ethernet_address=? | NECK::THOMPSON | | Tue Aug 09 1988 15:46 | 14 |
| Re .4
>> The standard VMS accounting software handles this
That's right, it can tell you how much is printed from a single node to a
single printer. But these printers are on ethernet. So print jobs can
be queued from ANY node to ANY queue name the system manager wants to
call it. This makes it nigh impossible to gather accounting data from all
the relevant nodes and figure out what and how much has been sent to
a particular lump of hardware.
|