Back in the early days of computing, user terminals utilized line printers for output. Naturally this took an incredible amount of paper, but it came with the advantage of creating a hard copy of ...
This is no ordinary desktop printer, though. It’s a roughly 175lb (80 Kg) beast capable of printing 100 lines per minute. Each line is 132 characters wide, printed on the tractor-feed green bar ...
An impact printer that prints a line at a time. Printronix pioneered this technology in 1974. Line matrix and band printers are the surviving line printer technologies, but line matrix can print ...
Microsoft has just reminded Windows users that the line printer daemon (LPR/LPD) will be deprecated soon. The line printer daemon protocol (LPR/LPD) is an old way that computers send print jobs to ...
A line printer that uses a metal band, or loop, of type characters as its printing mechanism. The band contains a fixed set of embossed characters that can only be changed by replacing the band.
Allows users to print a message to the RabbitMQ broker. In other words, maps LPR (per RFC 1179) to AMQP. This plugin is experimental. The described functionality is fully implemented and partially ...
There is still a line printer daemon in Windows, for example for printing with Unix clients. Microsoft will soon be pulling the plug on this for good. But now it's getting really serious ...