I was able to do this with XP and Vista (Vista surprisingly was less of a pain to get it working)but I just installed Windows 7 and am having trouble getting it to work. What I want is to connect my laptop DIRECTLY to my printer via ethernet cable. I don't want the router involved at all.I know what the IP # is for the printer, got that info from the printer menu. It also gave the subnet mask.Anyone know the process for doing this in Windows 7?I've tried adding a printer with TCP/IP and I put in the IP info and it still won't connect and print a test page.
10/28/2009 3:20:13 PM
Yeah this isn't going to work without a router or switch between them.You could use a crossover to do it, as long as they both have static ip's.Why not just use a usb cable?[Edited on October 28, 2009 at 4:50 PM. Reason : *]
10/28/2009 4:50:12 PM
I'd first start by making sure you can even ping the printer's IP from your laptop. It's a pretty straightforward process -- you add a local printer then add the tcpip port and query the printer for the driver.^ I assume since he's had it set up before that his ethernet devices are autosensing.
10/28/2009 4:54:54 PM
yea it definitely works, unless Windows 7 took away the capability, which I would kinda doubti figured out the problem....im a tardwhen i saw the IP address, one of the numbers was listed as xxx.xxx.022.xxx and of course i proceeded to enter the 0 when i typed it into the new port>.<[Edited on October 28, 2009 at 7:18 PM. Reason : ]
10/28/2009 7:02:24 PM
Always so quick to blame Windows
10/28/2009 8:47:33 PM
who blamed Windows?
10/28/2009 8:49:06 PM
I'm just giving you shit for no good reason
10/28/2009 8:50:20 PM