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I spend a lot of time during the long, dark evenings playing WoW. Today I went though my equipment and made a spreadsheet of upgrades and printed it out. There it comes out the printer!!! Never noticed how dirty that wall was before...
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PRP-250, 72 mm (3-inch) Thermal Receipt Printer
The PRP-250 is one of the fastest thermal printer in its class, with an elegant, glossy finish housing, Fametech's new PRP-250 series Thermal Receipt Printer complements your style. A sophisticated shiny black or red top cover with shiny white body is the essence of sleek, modern design. It also goes well with another Fametech's latest innovation - the Zenis POS series.
The ultra-fast , 250 mm / sec. printing speed is capable to fulfill most of the Retail and Restaurant application requirements. The Printer's 3-in-1 Interface provides flexibility to meet different applications need without keeping different interface models in stock. Meanwhile, the interface board is combined with RS-232 (Serial), USB, and LAN , altogether!
The printer is come with Windows Software Driver ( XP, Vista, and Win7 32-bit & 64-bit,) as well as OPOS driver. It is also compatible with ESC/POS command sets.
The package include paper, power adapter, power cord, cable cover and USB, serial or LAN interface cable. Optional accessories includes a high volume PBZ-100 Printer Buzzer for kitchen printing applications.
Welcome OEM/ODM!
Need to test out the color rendering on a epson wfp so I made some code to render this, might be useful for anyone who needs to test out the gamut of a printer. In this case coming from HSL
So it's been a while since I checked in from the Ubuntu installs at the library. Life intervened in a ton of ways. I went back over to the library today. I spent most of my time helping a Ukranian woman wade through the 250 emails in her inbox spanning almost two years. Every time she'd see a lost job opportunity or a note form a friend from eight months ago she'd say "see, this is why I have to know this, I lose work not knowing this..." I had to agree to a point but also mentioned that checking her email -- however that needed to happen -- more than once every 18 months was probably part of it.
So, I was in prime form when I went downstairs to check on the Ubuntu machines. The handyman had installed the ethernet drop from upstairs and I had limited time. This is what I did in about 20 minutes.
- made basic user accounts on each machine and changed the password to the admin accounts from the one I put on the YouTube video
- Made a desktop for that account that has firefox and open office on it (for now, we'll move to games and IM once this is established as working)
- Plugged both computers into the switch I got. Hey check that out, they're on the internet. That was simple.
- Plugged the printer into one of them (HP 6100 series all on one blah) and went through the install printer routine. Hey look IT JUST WORKS, and prints.
Now one of the machines prints, both of them are on the internet, they've got a non-admin account on both of them and a locked down admin account. Next time I'll do software updates and get the other printer working via the network, flesh out the desktops some and write some documentation. Woo!
Class Rush of Feb. 4th '09.
Date: February 4, 1909
Source Type: Postcard
Publisher, Printer, Photographer: Unknown
Postmark: March 19, 1909, Valparaiso, Indiana
Collection: Steven R. Shook
Remark: This building was located at 355 Greenwich Street and was razed around 1940. The Northern Indiana Law School was organized by Mark L. DeMotte in 1879 and later became a college within Valparaiso University in 1907. The law school discontinued operations in 2020.
Here, the law school building was made to appear as being in disrepair with fake broken windows, old doors brought to the site and set outside the building, and furniture scattered about the grounds. The postcard message on the reverse suggests that "dead men" were laying on the grounds, too, but were removed before the photograph was taken.
The building housing the law school, seen in this image, was originally the private residence of Northern Indiana Normal School and Business Institute professor Felix Ekblad, a former head of the fine arts department. This building continued to serve as the home of the law school until it was moved into the Law-Arts Building.
Sources:
Reading, A. H. 1905. The City of Homes, Schools and Churches: A Pictorial Story of Valparaiso, Its People and Its Environs. Valparaiso, Indiana: A. H. Reading. 82 p. [see p. 51]
Strietelmeier, John. 1959. Valparaiso's First Century: A Centennial History of Valparaiso University. Valparaiso, Indiana: Valparaiso University. 191 p. [see pp 41-42]
Copyright 2019. Some rights reserved. The associated text may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without prior written permission of Steven R. Shook.
Leyendecker produced a series of covers for the Inland Printer including many of the issues for 1897. He was in his early 20s and unknown when he created the covers as well as art work for each issues' editorial pages. He went on to become the primary cover artist for Saturday Evening Post before Norman Rockwell became well known.
I was invited to a day trip in a paper mill, to see how they make paper, which helped me to complete our Paper Review about printer/copy paper.
Read all the details here:
The Fold (OUSA site - www.origami-usa.org/thefold), or in www.happyfolding.com/
ENGLE & "Sydney" Mascot Nation
Date: June 19, 1909
Source Type: Postcard
Publisher, Printer, Photographer: Charles W. Beam
Postmark: None
Collection: Steven R. Shook
Remark: The reverse of this real photo postcard indicates that it was published by Charles W. Beam of Valparaiso, Indiana. Beam was a publisher of postcards in Valparaiso from approximately 1908 to 1917. It is believed that the photograph is of C. A. Englebeck, an entrant in the Cobe Trophy Race (Cobe Cup) that took place in Lake County, Indiana, on June 19, 1909, and was sponsored by the Chicago Automobile Club and named in honor of Ira Cobe, then president of the club.
The race circuit was 23.6 miles long, starting in Crown Point and proceeding to Cedar Lake and then on to Lowell, The course the headed back to Crown Point via Indiana 55, referred to as the old "Nine-Mile-Stretch" at the time of the big race. National Guard soldiers were stationed at over 40 spots along the route, while nine telegraph stations were well-spaced along the raceway and relayed news about the race to spectators in the grandstands.
Two races took place - the main race occurred on June 18th, being 402 miles in length (17 laps), followed by a race on June 20th, which was 236 miles in length (10 laps). The main race was won by Louis Chevrolet driving a 32 horsepower Buick.
Given evidence concerning the source of this image (Charles W. Beam) and historical information available regarding the Cobe Trophy Race, I am fairly certain that this image is of C. A. Englebeck and his mechanic Tarkington [first name unknown]. Published results of the main race indicate that Englebeck finished fifth in the race, driving a 44 horsepower Stoddard-Dayton automobile. The automobile shown above is a Stoddard-Dayton.
Note that the mascot is a pig, which is interesting with respect to Harley-Davidson history. Beginning in 1920, a team of farm boys, including Ray Weishaar, who became known as the "hog boys," consistently won motorcycle races. The group had a live hog as their mascot. Following a win, they would put the hog on their Harley and take a victory lap.
Copyright 2010. Some rights reserved. The associated text may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without prior written permission of Steven R. Shook.
I received an email from a coworker about a retiring professor trying to retrieve data off of old computers. Our central IT was unable to assist due to the age of the machines. The professor was trying to move files from a Mac OS X 10.2, 10.4, and NeXT computer. My heart skipped a beat after that reading that last one. Moving the vintage Mac files would be no problem because I keep those tools handy. I restore vintage Apple //, Macintosh, and other hardware as a hobby.
If you don't know what a NeXT computer is, it's this insanely expensive computer built by Steve Jobs after he was ousted from Apple in the 1980's. It ran Unix, had a gorgeous graphical user interface, and if you use OS X today it is still the foundational basis for the operating system. It was lightyears ahead of anything else out there at the time. Have you ever visited a website before? The first webpage was served on a NeXTcube.
I've never seen a working NeXT computer before though. I saw one in Berlin in a museum and read about them extensively, but I had no idea that our university actually had them.
I immediately went to the professor's office and he showed me what he was trying to do. We talked a little bit about vintage hardware and I told him that I'd never seen a working NeXT before. I was a little hesitant to respond because day-to-day we're flooded with tickets IT support isn't really my thing. Sometimes users, especially tenured professors, need a delicate approach because of their demands. This person could not have been more affable, kind, and good hearted. After talking a while he said he would rather have the hardware saved than go to scrap per university policy.
In the interest of archiving his data and this magnificent hardware I will be cooperating with him to save this NeXT computer. I've also agreed to save the Mac Cube and Power Macintosh G3. Twist my arm. They'll become archive computers if anyone needs a WordPerfect 3.5 file converted. Yes, people still have those.
I decided to document everything in place before moving it all to a secure location. That includes the NeXT computer, original manuals, flyers, software, printers, accessories, and even the original boxes.
The plan is to document EVERYTHING in detail. So stay tuned for future updates.
You can follow me as I post future updates:
Website: kenfager.com
Twitter: kenfagerdotcom
Instagram: kenfager
Flickr: kenfagerdotcom
Little bastard. That thing has been ruining essays and homework for a few months now and I had finally had it with all it's stuborn-ness.
How to set up a USB network printer and scanner server on Debian
If you would like to use this photo, be sure to place a proper attribution linking to xmodulo.com
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Apparently the original art work for this illustration is up for sale on eBay:
www.ebay.com/itm/JOSEPH-CHRISTIAN-LEYENDECKER-The-Inland-...
and it looks like there are many changes from what may be the original drawing and what ended up being printed, including a change from the initial letter N to O. Interesting that something like this appears after 119 years.
www.mytopprinters.com/best-all-in-one-multifunction-print... - Laser printers are hands down, the best type of printer in terms of quality and speed of output; however, they do have a downside as well. Let's look at its main benefits and drawbacks in comparison with other printers.
Allied Dimensions to launch LSBP 3D printer: www.3dprintersonlinestore.com/allied-dimensions-to-launch...
The compact 3D printer Ultimaker 2 from Dutch manufacturer Ultimaker. With its roots in the open source community it offers a reliable and sturdy design with very fine layer thickness capacity and a large build volume to size ratio. Loopable turntable video, no audio.
This was Kay's printer and works well. We have replacement toner cartridges in most of the colors. The cartridges fit this printer and also the printer from Karen's office.