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   REPLYADDR scott@alfter.diespammersdie.us   
   REPLYTO 3:770/3.0 UUCP   
   MSGID: <5GPuN.279785$7sbb.98048@fx16.iad> 206f0619   
   REPLY: 2bf3429c   
   PID: SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
   In article ,   
   68g.1499 <68g.1499@etr6.net> wrote:   
   >On 1/30/24 6:05 PM, Scott Alfter wrote:   
   >> In article ,   
   >> Chris Green wrote:   
   >>> I can't us Pi Imager because it's very broken on Ubuntu:-   
   >>   
   >> Sounds like something you should take up with the Ubuntu packagers. I   
   >> maintain a Gentoo ebuild for rpi-imager (it's in my overlay...sudo eselect   
   >> repository enable salfter && sudo emaint sync -r salfter), and it works like   
   >> a champ.   
   >>   
   >> More recently, I've migrated my print server (an ancient RPi Model B) from   
   >> Raspbia^H^H^H^H^H^H^HRPi OS to Alpine, and it's running headless. The   
   >> Alpine install needed to be done on a spare Raspberry Pi, but once it was up   
   >> and running with ssh access, I was able to do the rest of the setup over the   
   >> network. Once I had it configured as I wanted it, I brought the MicroSD   
   card   
   >> over to another computer to image it and shipped the image home so I could   
   >> blast it onto an SD card. It's a much lighter-weight system now...could put   
   >> it on a 128MB SD card, if I had one that small. :) The server runs headless,   
   >> with just two printers, a network cable, and a power supply plugged in.   
   >   
   >   
   > Ok ... I'm not gonna ask why you'd want a completely separate   
   > print server, based on an old Pi, rather than just printing   
   > directly from/to whatever :-)   
      
   The printers in question (an HP LaserJet 1320 and a Zebra LP2844) don't have   
   built-in network connectivity. The print server is basically a   
   JetDirect-compatible box that receives print data on one port for one   
   printer and on another port for the other. I have an actual, rather old HP   
   JetDirect print server in a box somewhere. It's in a box because its   
   10-Mbps Ethernet on one end and USB 1.x on the other is a bit slow for   
   complex print jobs. Fast Ethernet (100 Mbps) and USB 2.0 on the Raspberry   
   Pi is a step up.   
      
   --   
    _/_   
    / v \ Scott Alfter (remove the obvious to send mail)   
   (IIGS( https://alfter.us/ Top-posting!   
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