Dotan Cohen wrote: > In KDE 3 the user could scan an IP range for printers. As my D-Link > DIR-320 gives the printer a different address whenever the router > looses power, I simply told KDE 3 to scan 192.168.0.* for printers and > it found my printer. KDE 4 does not seem to have this ability, > furthermore, the only way to get the IP address of the printer out of > the router is through an EXE file that the router provides for > configuring Windows machines: not a solution for me! Is there some > other way that I could scan the network for printers, even from a > shell script, to get the correct IP address? > IIUC, KDE4 has no printer support so this is going to have to work differently. Can you use the CUPS web interface? IIUC, KDE4 uses NetworkManager and Avahi. I have to say that I don't have much of a network (Box connected to DSL modem with Ethernet) so I don't really know how these work or how KDE4 interfaces with them. But, it looks to me that if you want a KDE4 GUI to find your printer that you need one or both of them. NetworkManager depends on the DHClinet so you need DHCP installed too. -- JRT Linux (mostly) From Scratch ___________________________________________________ This message is from the kde mailing list. Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.