News0 min ago
Bluetooth print servers....?
Hi there Now that my wife has her own pc, I need to look at giving her access to the two printers that I have in my office (HP Laserjet 6p and Canon IP4300) I'd use regular wireless networking (I already have a wifi network in the house) but as I spend most of my time tunelled into work via vpn, that would mean I'd lose access to the printers myself So, I am looking at bluetooth enabling both printers with bluetooth print servers (adding bluetooth to both pcs, will be simple) Are there any pitfalls I need to be aware of? I'm sure the Laserjet 6P will be easy - it's a fairly dumb printer But the IP4300 does do bidirectional communications (reporting ink levels and the like) - will this still work over bluetooth? Many thanks for any suggestions/hints/tips/scare stories etc! Cheers Phil G
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by philg. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I'm reasonably sure the biggest pitfall is it won't work
It depends on the VPN client...
vpn protects the connection by giving it an IP address allocated by the VPN server however it also encrypts the pipeline so it gets a little zen ... your pipe has three ip addresses (your lan, the wan are rthe transport but the data is directed and decrypted through the server's subnet)
(oversimplified ... but go with it)
non IP ports work ok (serial, parallel and USB) - but ethernet, bluetooth and some firewire can be difficult or impossible to connect as they are in the transport layer not the data layer
but it depends mainly on your software
you'll be far better talking to your tech support ... we never name security products to outsiders
It depends on the VPN client...
vpn protects the connection by giving it an IP address allocated by the VPN server however it also encrypts the pipeline so it gets a little zen ... your pipe has three ip addresses (your lan, the wan are rthe transport but the data is directed and decrypted through the server's subnet)
(oversimplified ... but go with it)
non IP ports work ok (serial, parallel and USB) - but ethernet, bluetooth and some firewire can be difficult or impossible to connect as they are in the transport layer not the data layer
but it depends mainly on your software
you'll be far better talking to your tech support ... we never name security products to outsiders
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.