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You dont need to know replied on August 18, 2008 21:41 to the problem "No printer setup utility in Leopard?" in Apple:
The Printer Setup Utility is built into Print & fax preferences in Mac OS X 10.5 "Leopard", just like Internet Connect is now part of Network preferences in Mac OS X 10.5 "Leopard". Also AirPort base stations do not have printers connect wirelessly through IP addresses, you use Bonjour! Oh, by the way it's "ifconfig" in Mac OS X & Linux.
Atomica replied on June 28, 2008 02:53 to the problem "No printer setup utility in Leopard?" in Apple:
I found the printer's IP address after pressing the menu button (on the printer) for settings and scrolling through the options. Eventually I printed off a page that had all the printer's details - all generated by the printer. I entered the IP address and was finally able to access my printer from my MacBook Plus. Yay! (PS Good luck).
A comment on the problem "No printer setup utility in Leopard?" in Apple:
This just worked for me as well. Any comments regarding a printer/scanner combo. When trying to use the scanning software it won't recognize the scanner. Any suggestions to get the scanner software to recognize the scanner/printer? – Paul, on June 08, 2008 20:32
chuck replied on June 07, 2008 00:38 to the problem "No printer setup utility in Leopard?" in Apple:
chuck replied on June 07, 2008 00:37 to the problem "No printer setup utility in Leopard?" in Apple:
stoweboyd replied on June 02, 2008 19:11 to the problem "No printer setup utility in Leopard?" in Apple:
Exolon replied on May 27, 2008 22:25 to the problem "No printer setup utility in Leopard?" in Apple:
In case anyone is confused, Scott's suggestion makes no sense since you're looking for the IP address of the printer, not the computer you're using.
I'm having a similar problem suddenly with my Lexmark wireless printer... I think Bonjour is supposed to automatically find the printer on the local network, but if it doesn't work you might have to find the thing manually. As someone mentioned, you can print a test page which might show the printer's IP. Or you can use a portscanner like nmap to search for it (not the useless one in Leopard; it can only search a single IP you provide to it).
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