 |
|
Advertisement |
 |
PPC
> Computing
Guides > Tip
of the Week
TOTW: Multiple Printer Icons
David Dorn shows you how to set up your system
so you don’t have to fiddle with printer settings more than once.
Have you ever gone to print a quick draft of
something, only to discover, after you’ve got back from the
kettle, that it has printed in the highest resolution your printer
will allow, and used half your ink for you? It used always to happen
to me, until I came up with this little kink to get past it.
You can install as many printers as you like onto
any given port, whether it be LPT1: or a USB port (and serial and
network ports as well, come to that). You can also install the same
printer to the same port a number of times. So, all you need to do
is to install a second (and third and fourth, if you need them) copy
of your printer to the same port.
That’s
not so clever, but here’s what is. In most printer drivers, you
can establish a set of parameters as the “default” for that
printer. So, what you do is set one copy up as a top-quality printer
– say for photo quality, using whichever your “final copy”
paper settings are, and the maximum resolution etc. Then you rename
it to, say, “Photo <name of your printer>”. For draft
copies, you do the same, but set it to fastest print, lowest quality
and so on, and rename it to “Draft<name of your printer>”.
You can so the same with any other quality settings you may want to
use regularly. The only thing you need to remember is to save the
settings you’ve sorted out for each version of the driver.
Now, when you come to print, you can choose which
printer you want to use at the print dialogue box. I usually set the
draft version of my own printer as being the default, so that I
never mistakenly print to high quality.
If you’ve got an A3 capable printer, you can use
this method to create an A4 setup, A3 setup, 6x4 setup and so on,
remembering to label each instance of the driver accordingly. It’s
invaluable, and saves a lot of time fiddling with the settings every
time you print.
|