Many printers and scanners use driverless technologies such as AirPrint or IPP Everywhere, which don't require additional drivers on your Mac. But third-party drivers might still be available for older devices that do require a driver. Always check for software updates before connecting the device to your Mac for the first time. Driver HP Deskjet 932c for MAC OS 10.7: Download Driver HP Deskjet 932c for MAC OS 10.8: Download Driver HP Deskjet 932c for MAC OS 10.9: Download Driver HP Deskjet 932c for MAC OS 10.10: Download. HP DeskJet 930C/932C/935C Driver Download - PC Pitstop Driver Library. Windows Vista 32-Bit Driver. Windows Vista 32-Bit 32-bit.
- Jan 02, 2020 I had similar with an old HP DeskJet 930C and it was because the printer wasn't supported - looking at the drivers it only goes up to 10.9, so maybe old and not compatible with HS. You could try installing the 10.9 PPD and see where that gets you, but could have dire consequences. It's just the interface between the OS and driver that.
- Hp officejet 700 series driver-eyeladipe’s blog. Hp officejet 700 series driver-eyeladipe’s blog. Eyeladipe’s blog 2017-12-15. Hp officejet 700 series driver.
![Hp Deskjet 930c Driver Mac Os X 10.9 Hp Deskjet 930c Driver Mac Os X 10.9](/uploads/1/2/6/0/126023939/685198045.jpg)
Access printers through a Win2K machine | 7 comments | Create New Account
Click here to return to the 'Access printers through a Win2K machine' hint |
The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
I tried this feature out with my Deskjet 930C, however when it came time to select the print model, I notice that none of the HP Deskjet models were being shown, only laserjet printers. Regardless, I picked generic, which just caused the printer to endlessly print crap. Is there a fix for this? Best mac os x cad software. Thanks in advance.
I don't have Win 2000, but I'd say that the Microsoft lpd works only with postscript printers, or at least printers you have the driver of on Mac OSX.
I have a windows 95 machine at home, with a Canon BJC-6200 connected, which is not supported by Mac OSX. In order to print, I found a freeware lpd on the net that worked on W95 and set it up to pipe the input through ghostscript and then the printer. That way I emulated a postscript network printer which I could use from the mac.
I'm happy to say that results are quite correct, even when printing photos.
I have a windows 95 machine at home, with a Canon BJC-6200 connected, which is not supported by Mac OSX. In order to print, I found a freeware lpd on the net that worked on W95 and set it up to pipe the input through ghostscript and then the printer. That way I emulated a postscript network printer which I could use from the mac.
I'm happy to say that results are quite correct, even when printing photos.
That's right, inkjets aren't supported this way; only PostScript.
In 2000 and NT (but not XP, I think) you can enable Print Services for Macintosh, which has a PostScript interpreter. Then, you could send PostScript to Windows, and let Windows convert it to PCL for the printer. The problem is, Mac OS X ONLY supports PostScript Level 2, and the NT boxes only support PostScript Level 1, so it won't work!
You can try searching for 'balthisar' here for how to get GhostScript working on your Mac. THEN, with lpd enabled on the NT/2000 box, you should be able to print to the shared Windows printer. OR, if you install SAMBA on the Mac, I think you could use the GhostScript method to print to ANY Windows-shared printer.
Direct link to the GhostScript instructions:
http://homepage.mac.com/balthisar/HPNetworkInkjet.sit
This works, of course, with a print server box, like an HP JetDirect. It's up to you to figure out SAMBA if you want that approach. Otherwise, the NT/2000 box SHOULD look like print server box once LPD is enabled -- adapt the GhostScript instructions as per the instructions in this hint.
Good luck.
In 2000 and NT (but not XP, I think) you can enable Print Services for Macintosh, which has a PostScript interpreter. Then, you could send PostScript to Windows, and let Windows convert it to PCL for the printer. The problem is, Mac OS X ONLY supports PostScript Level 2, and the NT boxes only support PostScript Level 1, so it won't work!
You can try searching for 'balthisar' here for how to get GhostScript working on your Mac. THEN, with lpd enabled on the NT/2000 box, you should be able to print to the shared Windows printer. OR, if you install SAMBA on the Mac, I think you could use the GhostScript method to print to ANY Windows-shared printer.
Direct link to the GhostScript instructions:
http://homepage.mac.com/balthisar/HPNetworkInkjet.sit
This works, of course, with a print server box, like an HP JetDirect. It's up to you to figure out SAMBA if you want that approach. Otherwise, the NT/2000 box SHOULD look like print server box once LPD is enabled -- adapt the GhostScript instructions as per the instructions in this hint.
Good luck.
I have been successfully doing this ever since OSX Beta was available. I went one step further however. My laserprinter is a 4/600 appletalk only printer. This in turn is connected via an Asante Print box that is a localtalk to ethernet bridge. So enabled appletalk routing on my W2K box and set up the LPD print service. Now I can use OSX without Appletalk. Arduino uno mac os serial driver. Printing via LPD and FileSharing via SMB... This is also how I print to my appletalk printer from my linux box...
With help from jwwillsey, I got this hint to work and I'm now finally able to print to my personal LW 4/600 from my Wallstreet G3.
There is an important step that is not mentioned. You must also set up the LPR port on the Win2K machine and print to THAT port, not the original shared printer.
For instance, my set up: Laserwriter 4/600 connected via LocalTalk-Ethernet bridge to router; Win2K box to router with local IP address 10.0.1.100; PBG3 with local IP address 10.0.1.105
First, install the Unix printing services in Win2K using the Add/Remove Windows components control panel.
Next, add Laserwriter port: Select 'Add Printer' in Printer settings. Select 'Local Printer'. Create a new port for 'AppleTalk devices' (I capture the port so that all printing now goes through my Win2k box although I'm not sure this is necessary) and select the printer in the dialog box. Choose the closest driver. Name the printer, i.e. 'Laserwriter' and enable print sharing, also called 'Laserwriter'
Next, add the LPR port: Select 'Add Printer' in the Printer settings. Select 'Local Printer'. Create ANOTHER new port for 'LPR'. Enter the IP address of your Win2K box (computer name should work here instead, but I used my IP address 10.0.1.100) and the printer name 'Laserwriter'. Select the same driver as used before. Hp photosmart 7660 driver mac os x. Give this 'printer' a distinct name, i.e. 'LPR-Laserwriter' and share it as well.
Now you can add the 'LPR-Laserwriter' via the Print Center with success. Note: I had some difficulties printing to my LW 4/600 from Windows until I changed the output type (Advanced tab under Printer Properties) from ASCII to BINARY.
Works like a charm. Thanks to everyone for this awesome website. I check it everyday.
There is an important step that is not mentioned. You must also set up the LPR port on the Win2K machine and print to THAT port, not the original shared printer.
For instance, my set up: Laserwriter 4/600 connected via LocalTalk-Ethernet bridge to router; Win2K box to router with local IP address 10.0.1.100; PBG3 with local IP address 10.0.1.105
First, install the Unix printing services in Win2K using the Add/Remove Windows components control panel.
Next, add Laserwriter port: Select 'Add Printer' in Printer settings. Select 'Local Printer'. Create a new port for 'AppleTalk devices' (I capture the port so that all printing now goes through my Win2k box although I'm not sure this is necessary) and select the printer in the dialog box. Choose the closest driver. Name the printer, i.e. 'Laserwriter' and enable print sharing, also called 'Laserwriter'
Next, add the LPR port: Select 'Add Printer' in the Printer settings. Select 'Local Printer'. Create ANOTHER new port for 'LPR'. Enter the IP address of your Win2K box (computer name should work here instead, but I used my IP address 10.0.1.100) and the printer name 'Laserwriter'. Select the same driver as used before. Hp photosmart 7660 driver mac os x. Give this 'printer' a distinct name, i.e. 'LPR-Laserwriter' and share it as well.
Now you can add the 'LPR-Laserwriter' via the Print Center with success. Note: I had some difficulties printing to my LW 4/600 from Windows until I changed the output type (Advanced tab under Printer Properties) from ASCII to BINARY.
Works like a charm. Thanks to everyone for this awesome website. I check it everyday.
Hp Deskjet 930c Driver Mac Os X 10.99 Mavericks Download
hi all,
anyone trying to do this using windows xp? shahn's procedure was helpful, but my printer still doesn't seem to want to print. i have a lexmark z52 set up on the winxp pc and i'm using the 'generic' print driver on the os x mac. if anyone can spot where i've gone wrong, i'd appreciate it. here's what i've done:
on the winxp pc: setup 2 printers. 1 is the lexmarkz52 using the normal lpt1 printer port, and shared as lexmarkz52. 2 is lpr-lexmarkz52 using the lpr port with my winxp pc's ip address (192.168.0.3) and 'lexmarkz52' in the printer queue input, and it is shared as lpr-lexmarkz52.
on the os x mac: in print center, i've added lpr-lexmarkz52 as the lpr printer, the host as 192.168.0.3, 'lpr-lexmarkz52' in the queue input, and had to use the generic 'driver' because lexmark z52 was not an option.
when i print a document on the mac, say a webpage, it spools thru print center, which sends it over to the pc. then on the pc with each of the printer queues open, i can see that the document goes first to the lpr-lexmarkz52 printer, and is instantly spooled over to the lexmarkz52 printer. when the document is in the lexmarkz52 window, it acts as if it's printing--the kb of the document increases as it would if a physical document were normally progressing out of the printer (though no document does). finally, the document is deleted out of the lexmarkz52 print queue window as if it was properly printed.
so, i know the i'm getting the mac printed document over to my pc printer queue, but it's not printing out.
any ideas anyone?
btw: in windows xp, i could not find any settings for binary vs. ascii. i'm not sure if this is a xp issue or just my individual lexmark print driver.
thanks,
curtian4
anyone trying to do this using windows xp? shahn's procedure was helpful, but my printer still doesn't seem to want to print. i have a lexmark z52 set up on the winxp pc and i'm using the 'generic' print driver on the os x mac. if anyone can spot where i've gone wrong, i'd appreciate it. here's what i've done:
on the winxp pc: setup 2 printers. 1 is the lexmarkz52 using the normal lpt1 printer port, and shared as lexmarkz52. 2 is lpr-lexmarkz52 using the lpr port with my winxp pc's ip address (192.168.0.3) and 'lexmarkz52' in the printer queue input, and it is shared as lpr-lexmarkz52.
on the os x mac: in print center, i've added lpr-lexmarkz52 as the lpr printer, the host as 192.168.0.3, 'lpr-lexmarkz52' in the queue input, and had to use the generic 'driver' because lexmark z52 was not an option.
when i print a document on the mac, say a webpage, it spools thru print center, which sends it over to the pc. then on the pc with each of the printer queues open, i can see that the document goes first to the lpr-lexmarkz52 printer, and is instantly spooled over to the lexmarkz52 printer. when the document is in the lexmarkz52 window, it acts as if it's printing--the kb of the document increases as it would if a physical document were normally progressing out of the printer (though no document does). finally, the document is deleted out of the lexmarkz52 print queue window as if it was properly printed.
so, i know the i'm getting the mac printed document over to my pc printer queue, but it's not printing out.
any ideas anyone?
btw: in windows xp, i could not find any settings for binary vs. ascii. i'm not sure if this is a xp issue or just my individual lexmark print driver.
thanks,
curtian4
Hp Deskjet 930c Driver Mac Os X 10.99
I just did some more thorough reading and realized that i have to have a postscript printer (i've got an inkjet).
i'll try the ghostwriter solution.
thanks anyways,
curtian4
i'll try the ghostwriter solution.
thanks anyways,
curtian4