Administrator Guide

a Select Port— Select the port you want from the list. LPT1 or LPT2 selects the connection to a direct-connected USB printer.
b Printer Name — (Required) Enter name you want displayed in your list of printers.
most USB direct-connected printers report/ll in their printer name automatically.
NOTE
: If Enable LPD service for the printer is selected, the printer name becomes the queue name for other clients
using LPR to print to this printer.
c Printer Identication — Enter the type or model of the printer in the exact text of the Windows printer driver name—including
capitalizations and spaces, most USB direct-connected printers report/ll in their printer identications automatically.
This entry must be either the device driver name for the printer under the Microsoft Windows system, or a key to map to the
device driver. If not specied, the name will be defaulted to the printer-supplied identication for standard direct-connected USB
printers or Generic / Text Only for non-USB connected printers upon connection to Windows hosts. The driver name mapping
takes place either through a printer-mapping le read by the system as part of the global prole (wnos.ini) or by MetaFrame
servers through the MetaFrame printer conguration le (\winnt\system32\wtsprnt.inf).
d Printer Class— This is optional. Select the printer class from the list PCL5, PS, or TXT or PCL4.
e Enable the printer device — Select this option to enable the directly-connected printer. It enables the device to display on the
remote host.
f Enable LPD service for the printer — Select this to make the thin client an LPD (Line Printer Daemon) network print server for
LPR printing requests from the network.
NOTE
:
If the thin client is to be used as an LPD printer server, DHCP must not be used and a static IP address must be assigned to
the client, see Conguring the Network Settings.
3 Click OK to save the settings.
Conguring
Thin Client Settings 83