A high-speed Internet connection is no longer a luxury for most businesses; it's a necessity. As a result, many businesses now use broadband cable connections to surf and work over the Web at ...
Most small businesses don't need an enterprise-class print server installed on their network. If your office printer doesn't have network accessibility, you can connect a small device to it and make ...
Hey guys, I know this is long to read but the basics is that if I keep my clients up to date they can't add printers from the print server without being an admin. If they already had the network ...
Print servers are the latest thing for small offices and home offices. Wireless print servers that use 802.11b (Wi-Fi) technology are cutting edge. Do you need one? It depends. If you have more than ...
A researcher has created a remote print server allowing any Windows user with limited privileges to gain complete control over a device simply by installing a print driver. In June, a security ...
Russell Smith is a technology consultant and trainer specializing in management and security of Microsoft server and client technologies. He is a Microsoft Certified Systems Engineer with more than 15 ...
Last time, I did a teardown on an eight-port wired GbE switch that refused to remain fully powered up. This time, a print server that refuses to fully power up at all goes under the magnifying glass.
A popular project for a Raspberry Pi single-board computer is to create a wireless print server, one of the many unexpected use cases of an old Raspberry Pi. This is a simple hack to turn a ...
We're in the process of standing up a new 2008 R2 domain for use at the local office. Our current domain is 2003. I have a combination File/Print Server that I need to move over. It's 2003 R2 VM with ...
Another zero day vulnerability in Windows Print Spooler can give a threat actor administrative privileges on a Windows machine through a remote server under the attacker's control and the ...
The physical sciences community already has an e-print server, the Los Alamos National Laboratory e-print archive (http://xxx.lanl.gov/). Anyone can upload an article ...
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