From: Robert K. <rl...@al...> - 2019-10-02 00:23:57
|
On Tue, 1 Oct 2019 06:50:52 -0400, Solomon Peachy wrote: > On Mon, Sep 30, 2019 at 10:33:29PM -0400, Robert Krawitz wrote: >> Interesting. But it's a bit of a mixed bag (a lot of their current >> printers are not IPP-Everywhere), and if nobody else has >> self-certified any printers, it's harder to say. > > I think if you look for "Airprint" or "Mopria" support instead of > "IPP-Everywhere" the list will get a bit longer. > > Eg all but the very first wifi-enabled SELPHY model supports AirPrint, > but only the most recent two models handle IPP-Everywhere. > > (Unfortunately, while Airprint and Mopria are built on top of IPP, > they're not quite comptible with IPP-Everywhere, and the specs are > proprietary...) Which isn't really very useful for IPP-Everywhere :-( >> I guess I'm a bit too familiar with Epson inkjets, which aren't (Epson >> offers some software to provide IPP functionality, but that isn't >> IPP-Everywhere). > > A bunch of Epsons are listed as Mopria certified, but they are > predominantly XP- or EP-/ET- series models -- home/consumer/office > targeted, and not the more specialized or commercial-focused units that > provide most of our joy... Which again, isn't the same thing as IPP-Everywhere. -- Robert Krawitz <rl...@al...> *** MIT Engineers A Proud Tradition http://mitathletics.com *** Member of the League for Programming Freedom -- http://ProgFree.org Project lead for Gutenprint -- http://gimp-print.sourceforge.net "Linux doesn't dictate how I work, I dictate how Linux works." --Eric Crampton |