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I'm more surprised that after 30 years, the printing industry still haven't pull their head out of their behind and come up with a standardised language which allows direct printing to their devices without the need of employing proprietary/closed source drivers.
Postscript is only seen on very high end printers; I hope that maybe XPS will turn into that magic silver bullet where by rather than being at the mercy of the hardware company, people can just go, purchase a printer, hook it up, and voila, it "just works"(tm)
if you can do lock-in, you do lock-in, that seems to be the mantra for every industry as far back as the industrial revolution. only when customers, be them other industries that need their parts, or end users, rise up and cry for standards, will they show up. and then only for that single industry.
yes, its a practice thats officially frowned upon by economists as they are monopolistic. but as its a cheap, and effective, way to increase income, it will be done for the foreseeable future...
hell, just like printer brands talk about the need to use same brand ink and similar parts, car brands tells you to use their own car parts. and its a much older industry. but i dont think they ever had, or tried to misuse, a law like the DMCA...
"I'm more surprised that after 30 years, the printing industry still haven't pull their head out of their behind and come up with a standardised language which allows direct printing to their devices without the need of employing proprietary/closed source drivers."
That's why we have every application outputting Postscript for printing by default in UNIX world for decades. :-)
"Postscript is only seen on very high end printers; [...]"
I've recently seen a "cheap" Brother multifunctional device (laser printer, scanner, fax, copier) being able to understand both standard Postscript and PCL.
It seems to be normal for users: They see a shiny device, buy it, then start complaining about missing driver support. But it was cheap, at last. :-)
The buying decision usually is not lead by hardware support, but instead by the shinyness ot the device or the package, or the claims on the package, or the fantastic low price.
Compliance to existing and well proved standards seems to make printers more expensive. (You could extend this statement to digital photo and movie cameras, MP3 players and other funny devices, too.)
I've used Postscript capable printers only (HP Laserjet II, 4, now 4000, Lexmark Optra S series meanwhile) without any problems together with UNIX workstations and Apple's PowerBooks without any problems, without having to google around for strange printer drivers which need to be placed somewhere into system directories...
"[...] I hope that maybe XPS will turn into that magic silver bullet where by rather than being at the mercy of the hardware company, people can just go, purchase a printer, hook it up, and voila, it "just works"(tm)"
I really hope the situation will develop this way. Today, while most home users favour multifunctional devices (inkjet printer, scanner), sometimes it's a bit complicated to get these crappy things working. While some products are supported well both on Mac OS X and UNIX/Linux, others won't even provide basic functionalities. Most of them even aren't capable of outputting text (without driver). Hey, even cheap dotmatrix printers could do that! :-)
To come back on topic: Automated driver support would expecially be interesting to allow users buying and using (!) bleeding edge technology, e. g. printers that just occured on the market. They would not need to purchase a new OS (and a new computer) in order to benefit from new devices - after all, the system installs the correct driver (from the manufacturer of the device) automatically and lets the user "just use" the device, instead of forcing him to sit down and google around for drivers that promise to make the printer work.







Member since:
2005-07-07
It seems weird that HP's drivers that give basic printer functionality should need any updating for Leopard. Apple uses CUPS as the backend for printing. Unless they have changed that, printing should still work. Also, if Apple uses CUPS for printing, shouldn't the printer drivers written for the Mac work on Linux machines using CUPS?