SP1 and iPrint printer profiles

SP1 is supposed to have printer driver profiles available for Linux
servers now. Can anyone tell me where to access them? There is no option
that I can find in iManager.
Brian

if you look in /var/opt/novell/iManager/nps/packages there should be an
"iprint.npm" file. What is the date??
It should be dated 8/11/2005 @ 11:35:15am. On my server, I have the same
NPM version you indicate and it does show up. Did you reboot the server
after the update?? If you want, you can go into iManager - Configuration -
Module Installation - Available Novell Plug-in Modules, and select new and
install the correct one. I believe you have to remove the one that is
installed however first...
>>> On 9/12/2005 at 8:12 pm, in message
<[email protected]>, Brian
Snipes<[email protected]> wrote:
> On Mon, 12 Sep 2005 22:41:28 +0000, iprintrox wrote:
>
>> In iManager, under the iPrint role, Printer Driver Profile task. This
> is
>> support for windows drivers only. Support for Windows printer driver
>> profiles now exists on a NW server backend and a linux server backend..
>>
>
> That was my understanding but it doesn't appear to be the case on either
> of the servers that I have updated to SP1. They have iFolder 3 now so
> I believe the update went fine.
> My iPrint npm is :
> iPrint Management 2.5.1.20050724 iPrint Management Plugin
> These are the options that show up in my iprint role on both servers
> (both
> on Windows from IE and in Firefox):
> Create Driver Store
> Create Printer
> Create Print Manager
> Delete Print Object
> Manage Driver Store
> Manage Printer
> Manage Print Manager
> Printer Banner Configuration
> Printer Pool Configuration
> These servers were updated using rug and not using the CD SP1 images.
>
> Brian

Similar Messages

  • Print Profiles and Packing Stations

    How do I get print outputs from a Handling Unit Packing Station to de directed to the printers assigned in Print Profiles PRPHU?
    The Handling Unit Packing Station is linked to the Print Profile through HUPAST_C and the Print Profile is linked to 2 outputs to 2 different printers. But it donu2019t work the way I supposed it to work - I get the message "No printer defined for output ZST1"

    It may be helpful to you to know the logic which determines the printer that is used for output on the system. This is as follows :
    1. the system will first check the output device specified in output record. The setting here has most priority.
    2. system will read the setting in output type customizing double click the corresponding output type, find field "print parameter". Please see F1 help for this field.
       3. According to the setting in point 2, system will choose output device either specified in trxn VP01 or trxn SU3.
    Also, please be aware that if output is entered manually, then the printer is not defaulted. Print parameters are only defaulted when the output is determined by the system automatically.
    Hope this helps.

  • Printer profiles not recognised in Photoshop CS6 print dialogue

    Note that the Illustrator, Indesign and Acrobat print dialogues see all my (custom) printer profiles.
    Even Photoshop sees them in the Apply Profile and Convert to Profile dialogues: just not when trying to print.
    Is this a known problem?

    Thanks, Jeff. This issue goes far beyond Adobe. I'm trying to resolve colorspace problems that get even more confusing when there are multiple web pages or other documents at multiple websites, including software companies and camera companies that have conflicting information for the same thing. I don't want to add something else into the mix that may make things worse. Unless the user can have the settings that they know worked on their device to rely on as a point of reference to make controlled changes to accommodate a software change, it's like taking two handfulls of M&Ms to represent various colorspaces in three places in a program and using trial and error to figure out which two or three colors to use and in which order. I think of this as informative dialog and not venting.
    Update: After burning through another color ink cartridge and 20 more sheets of Kodak glossy photo paper, I managed to come up with a combination of profiles and colorspaces that are acceptable with the Kodak ESP9 printer in PS CS6. While Adobe RGB should work from the Nikon D7000 JPEG for a larger color gamut, with the Kodak printer, the colors were dull. Went back to sRGB in the camera and sRGB IEC61966-2.1 for the working RGB profile. In this printer, color management cannot be disabled in the printer itself, so I selected Adobe RGB. In the PS Print Settings Color Management, PS Manages Colors,  and the Printer Profile is Beta RGB (Adobe RGB is not an available choice). After increasing the photo brightness to about +20, the contrast slightly, and increasing the shadows setting to bring out the shadowed areas somewhat, the printed photo is a close match to the on-screen image on the calibrated LED monitor. When I tried CIE RGB, the colors were more saturated but had too much blue. Maybe this will help others.

  • CANON PRO-1 PRINTER PROFILE ACCESS PROBLEM

    I own a Canon pro-1 printer and I am trying to access my third party profiles from within the printer setup/printer profile window, but I am restricted to selecting from only the  Canon's Pro-1 titled profiles for example, Canon pro-1 <FA> 2/3 fine art paper photo rag .  All of my profiles are located in the same location, Windows/system 32/spool/driver/color.  Where do I go to change my printer's settings so that I may access all of my printer icc profiles?  I noticed that the Canon profiles have an .icm format, while my other profiles read .icc. 
    Thank you for your help.
    Mark

    All of your printer profiles must be in the folder that you specified.  I just bought a Pro-1 printer and my printer profiles total seventeen for the Pro-1.  Your Hahnemuhle or other paper mfr profiles must be in this same folder for windows to find them. If you think you are missing some, I would re-install the printer driver, which is where the software loads the icc profiles to begin with.  You have to download other paper mfr profiles from their own sites for the Pro-1 model.
    Debra

  • CS6 printer profiles

    CS6 does not reconize printer profiles used in cs5, why and how is this fixed?

    Thanks, Jeff. This issue goes far beyond Adobe. I'm trying to resolve colorspace problems that get even more confusing when there are multiple web pages or other documents at multiple websites, including software companies and camera companies that have conflicting information for the same thing. I don't want to add something else into the mix that may make things worse. Unless the user can have the settings that they know worked on their device to rely on as a point of reference to make controlled changes to accommodate a software change, it's like taking two handfulls of M&Ms to represent various colorspaces in three places in a program and using trial and error to figure out which two or three colors to use and in which order. I think of this as informative dialog and not venting.
    Update: After burning through another color ink cartridge and 20 more sheets of Kodak glossy photo paper, I managed to come up with a combination of profiles and colorspaces that are acceptable with the Kodak ESP9 printer in PS CS6. While Adobe RGB should work from the Nikon D7000 JPEG for a larger color gamut, with the Kodak printer, the colors were dull. Went back to sRGB in the camera and sRGB IEC61966-2.1 for the working RGB profile. In this printer, color management cannot be disabled in the printer itself, so I selected Adobe RGB. In the PS Print Settings Color Management, PS Manages Colors,  and the Printer Profile is Beta RGB (Adobe RGB is not an available choice). After increasing the photo brightness to about +20, the contrast slightly, and increasing the shadows setting to bring out the shadowed areas somewhat, the printed photo is a close match to the on-screen image on the calibrated LED monitor. When I tried CIE RGB, the colors were more saturated but had too much blue. Maybe this will help others.

  • Printer Profiles on iPrint

    Hello Forums
    Is there any automatic processes that updates already installed printers
    on workstations if the Printer Profiles is updated e.g. with another
    tray, or do i have to delete the printer and reinstall it manually with
    that /ipp webpage?
    - Michael

    On Thu, 13 Aug 2009 10:54:27 +0000, Michael wrote:
    > Is there any automatic processes that updates already installed printers
    > on workstations if the Printer Profiles is updated e.g. with another
    > tray, or do i have to delete the printer and reinstall it manually with
    > that /ipp webpage?
    You can't really push down the new settings automatically. However,
    there are a couple of things you can do depending on if this is NetWare
    or Linux. If it's NetWare you can rename the printer agent on the
    Manager screen. Renaming the printer will cause iPrint to install the
    new printer and delete the old printer automatically. When it's
    installed with the new name it will pull down the drivers and printer
    profile meaning it will get the updated profile with new settings (e.g.
    new tray added).
    An option that works with both platforms is to create a new printer
    altogether and then define printer agent redirection again within the
    NDPS/iPrint Manager. When someone attempts to access a redirected
    printer the iPrint client will download the new printer and delete the
    old one. TID 3006726 gives more information on printer agent redirection.
    Note that a feature for OES2 SP2 is auto driver update. The checkbox
    already exists in iManager on OES2 SP1 with the latest iPrint plugin but
    is not yet active.
    http://www.novell.com/documentation/...a/bkbds9r.html
    Joe Marton
    Novell Knowledge Partner
    SUSE Linux Enterprise 11 is ready for action.

  • Colormunkie Photo printer profile (*.ICM and *.ICC ) are not seen by LR4.2 in the Print Job section

    Colormunkie Photo printer profile (*.ICM and *.ICC ) are not seen by LR4.2 in the Print Job section
    I used Colormunkie Photo to create an .ICM file for printer calibration.   When that failed I tried changing the suffix to .ICC.  Under neither circumstance did LR4.2 display the file in the menu to select printer profile.  There were several display files with both suffixes but no printer files at all.  I tried three times with no success and cannot think of what else to try. The first two were the same.  I varied the file creation name suffix in the third.  Help will be appreciated. My OS is Win 7 ultimate SP1  Printer is HP 2550L laserjet.

    Tillman
    Glad you found your answer, Colormunki is smart enough to figure out the color space for the printer as I found out - But for quality work the latest generation of inkjet printers from Epson and Canon are hard to beat, and compared to a laserjet the quality is like night and day. The other benefit of changing up to an inkjet printer is the choice of papers available which you could not put through a laserjet.
    I had a colleague that tried printing on Photoglossy paper through his color laser and it fried the fuser, and HP, while they replaced the fuser unit under warranty, made it very clear that that was a daft thing to do.
    So if I were in your position I would go with an inkjet and you will then enjoy the benefits of better quality output, better paper choices and with your Colormunki be able to make custom profiles that will work in LR
    Cheers
    Mike

  • How do I create a new document that is 8" X 8" and with Print as the document profile?

    Page 47 in Chris Botello's Adobe Illustrator CS6 of Cengage's Illustrated Series asks this for the Independent Challenge for Unit B.  "Create a new document that is 8" X 8" and with Print as the document profile." As long as its CMYK it's "Print". Right?  If I go and change the size the profile goes custom. I'm a Graphic Design Student at a local university. If there are others who have used this book, Please giver me a holler. I wonder what they want there? You think they want to change the "Print" profile? That hasn't been covered. I'm on CC not CS6 but haven't found differences in that area. Probably just not written very clearly.
    Thanks,
    Gary

    Thanks Monika,
    I hate it when I fixate on what should be easy. It's probably just a poorly worded task. I don't think it will blow my GPA.
    Gary

  • Epson 3800 printer profiles not showing up in Photoshop 3 and 5

    When I try to print to my Epson PRO 3800, asking Photoshop to handle colors, this printer profiles are not available. I have this printer for years and have always used PS CS3 to print (and handle colors). Now I have PS CS5 but continue to use 3 for printing to the 3800, because the Epson profiles disppeared from CS5. Now they have disappeared from CS3 too. Any advices?
    Thanks1

    it might be helpful to include what os you are using (unless i missed it)
    http://helpx.adobe.com/photoshop/kb/print-settings-option-unavailable-print.html
    gballard.net/photoshop/epson/cs5/

  • Printer Profiles and Onscreen proofing

    Is there a way to adjust the options for Onscreen Proofing with ICC profiles in Aperture?
    I downloaded and installed the Premium ICC printer profiles for the Epson Stylus Photo R2400 printer and have noticed an issue when I use Onscreen Proofing with these profiles, especially the matte ones. The screen display is muted as if the contrast is lowered and the colors compressed. I viewed the same image in Photoshop with Proof Colors and did not see this problem until I turned Simulate Paper Color on in the Customize Proof Condition dialog. Then the image took on the same appearance. Interestingly, the problem does not occur when I use the Epson profiles that are installed by default with the software that comes with the printer. The images print fine in Aperture (better than from Photoshop) using either the premium or default profile. I just can't use the premium profiles for onscreen proofing.
    The bottom line is that the Epson Premium ICC printer profiles appear to be incorrectly built and do not simulate paper color accurately. In addition, Aperture appears to simulate paper color by default and I can't find a way to turn it off. This is unfortunate since the default Epson profiles, which are less accurate for printing, provide more accurate onscreen proofing.
    Dual 2.3 GHz PowerPC G5   Mac OS X (10.4.6)   2.5 GB DDR2 SDRAM, NVIDIA 7800GT

    I'm having the same issue and would love here a solution.
    Tim

  • "Preview" and print  profiles

    Hi. I was surprised and happy to see a list of print profiles in the Preview program where you can "soft proof" an image file. Is there any way to add additional print profiles for soft proofing?
    Thanks!
    Message was edited by: Randy Allen

    Put the ICC file in this folder:
    ~/Library/ColorSync/Profiles/

  • IPhoto, Colorsync and Custom Printer and display profiles

    I am attempting to understand the way that iPhoto 6 handles/uses custom ICC profiles that have been set in System Prefs>Monitors>Color, and in Utilities>ColorSync Utility>Devices>Printers.
    In short, my monitor and printer have both been custom profiled, (Using System Preferences>Monitors>Color, I've set my custom monitor profile. Using the ColorSync utility I have selected my custom ICC profile for my printer). My camera is using SRGB. iPhoto is set to 'Add ColorSync profile'.
    Page setup is set for the proper printer and paper size.
    Using the Advanced Print Setup I have selected the appropriate paper type, turned off printer color correction, and activated ColorSync color correction.
    I'm not certain that iPhoto and ColorSync are actually talking to each-other.
    I come from a Photoshop background, where it is possible to set the printer profile at output, using 'Print with Preview'. This setup is intended for my parents though, so Photoshop is not an option.

    1. > What sort of output problems are you encountering?
    1) No output problems, I'm simply trying to figure out ColorSync interacts with iPhoto as there's little or no documentation on the topic.
    2. > Also what printer are you using or your parents will be using?
    2. My folks are using a Canon S820
    More specifically, I'm hoping to use a custom printer profile, which has produced decent color accurate results with this setup in Photoshop.
    This presents 2 questions, a) how to utilize the new custom printer profile in iPhoto (use color sync utility? by declaring the profile in the 'Current Profile' section for the device) and b) does iPhoto pay attention to the Current Profile selected profiles when printing?
    Basically I'm looking for info regarding the behavior of iPhoto with regards to ColorSync. The lack of documented info is the problem.
    I was told today when on the phone with Apple, that iPhoto pays attention to the default profile and not the Current Profile selection, but the rep didn't sound sure, so I'm not too confident in his response.
    Also, it doesn't make sense to me that ColorSync Utility would allow you to select a profile and that iPhoto would then subsequently ignore it.
    My folks are importing camera images that are tagged as sRGB, iPhoto is set to apply the profile per the advanced prefs, their monitor is profiled and the profile is activated.
    iPhoto has plenty of documentation regarding the tagging of images with color profiles, and the display of these profiles with regard to Apple monitors (by using CameraRGB etc) but not a heck of a lot devoted to getting good prints at home through the use of ColorSync, and custom profiles.
    ColorSync was designed for just this type of thing, and when you print, it's available as a color correction option in the Color Settings section of the print dialog box, but there's nothing written regarding using it effectively and properly.
    Getting color accurate prints is not a 'Pro' feature, it's something that the Mac is supposed to embrace out of the box thru the use of ColorSync...that's the whole point of ColorSync a system wide color management workflow regardless of the 'Pro-ness' of the app or so I thought.
    Every rep (AppleStore, Genius Bar, Creatives, AppleCare, iPhoto Software support) try to pass this of as a pro feature, and it is not– is something that ColorSync is supposed to be doing for the whole system, not just Aperture or Photoshop
    MacBook   Mac OS X (10.4.8)  

  • Printer profile not there and brings into preview

    When I go to print, the printer profile for my Epson is not in the list. I know it's not on the computer, why is it not on the CS5 list?
    Then I click print and it print the image into Preview instead of printing on the epson. Why is that? thanks!

    charles badland wrote:
    If the profiles are in the ./Library /Color Sync /Profiles folder—and if they are compatible with the combination of inks and paper you're using—Photoshop will see them.  If they are not, Photoshop won't.
    Be sure to look HARD DRIVE>Library>Color Sync>Profiles folder and not the USER>Library>Color Sync>Profiles.
    That tripped me up a bit a few weeks back.
      That's what the convention dot slash ./ means, the Root Level, as opposed to the tilde ~ which stands for the User Library.

  • Can one set up Lightroom to allow use of manufacturer's printer profiles and Advanced Color Settings

    I like the effects that I can apply to my B&W images using Advanced Color Settings, but understand that I get best print quality using the manufacturer's paper profiles. However, I get locked out of Advanced Color Settings unless I choose "Managed by Printer". Can I do both - select a specific paper profile and use Advanced Color Settings? Thanks

    I don't know what printer you are using. But if you want to use all of the controls in the Lightroom print module you need to let Lightroom manage the color. For my printer, this requires making that choice in Lightroom and then disabling color management in the printer driver. Then, using Lightroom, I am able to use all of those settings and choose the appropriate profile provided by the paper manufacturer.
    With my printer, if I choose to let the printer manage the color, I can make all of those choices in the printer driver. But you cannot split your management between Lightroom and your printer.  You have to go one way or the other.

  • Epson Printer Profiles and Mac ColorSync

    I have had a consistent problem with PS CS3 printing darker than my calibrated monitor despite everything that I do with softproofing etc. Interestingly, when I print the identical image from Lightroom 2.2, the paper print is a much better match to what I am seeing on the monitor. I am beginning to wonder whether the difference has anything to do with the way these programs interact with ColorSync on the Mac. I am using an Intel iMac running OSX 10.4.11 and print with an Epson 2200 using the custom Epson paper profiles available on Epson's website. In both the Lightroom 2.2 and the CS3 I leave ColorSync set to Standard and allow LR or PS to manage the printing (No Color Management); however, when I open the Mac ColorSync Utility and examine the printer profiles there, it is using the standard Epson profiles that came with the printer driver rather than the newer ones (e.g., SP2200 Luster_PK.icc rather than SP2200 Prem.Luster1440.icc). Could this "mismatch" of printer profiles be causing a different result in LR2.2 and Photoshop? Should I change the profile in ColorSync so that it points to the new profiles?
    I'd appreciate anyone's help!!

    Also try the Photodisc PDI target image download here
    http://www.gballard.net/dl/PDI_TargetFolderONLY.zip
    And remember:
    The file (the document Source Space) is independent of Photoshop.
    The Color Management System CMS, Photoshop, ONLY uses the monitor profile for one thing: To PROOF source file on the monitor (the monitor profile has zero to do with how the file prints).
    The Color Management System CMS, Photoshop, ONLY uses the printer (target) profile Print Space for one thing: To PROOF source file on the paper (the printer profile Print Space has zero to do with how the file looks on the monitor).
    In other words:
    The printer can PROOF (print) the source file faithfully regardless of how right or wrong the monitor is set up, and
    The monitor can PROOF (display) the source file faithfully regardless of how right or wrong the printer is set up.
    COLORSYNC
    Why/how are you using ColorSync in an Adobe-Epson print workflow?
    DARK PRINTS EPSON
    This has already been discussed here, might try adding dark to your search...

Maybe you are looking for