When anyone mentions printing, my advice is always the same: print less.
Save the trees, and save the information in a more flexible format, such
as online.
My pessimism notwithstanding, users continue to print and some vendor
innovations make printing easier. One of those is a company in Toronto
named Qnetix, part of the large Canadian company Charon Systems, Inc.
Their new UniPrint product (uniprint.net) takes the hassle out of remote
printing and client/printer driver mismatches.
Relying on Windows Terminal Server, and now a second version that uses
Citrix MetaFrame, UniPrint puts a driver on the client which converts
print output to PDF files. This eliminates the need for the client to
have a printer driver to match the printer at the end of the line. The
server module handles all the print driver matching between the server
and the printer, leaving the user out of the mix entirely. Any printer
controlled by the server will play along.
This lead me to a head-smacking "why didn't I think of that" moment.
I've been testing third-party products which create PDF files and never
thought about the value of sending those files to the printer rather
than the real document.
You need a Windows or Citrix server in the mix, but you probably have
that. You need to put the client software on each computer or add the
Gateway Module to support thin clients. But as long as your server and
your printer(s) agree, your clients can print without a problem. Pricing
starts at $995 per server.
Let's build off this: what if Adobe convinced printer manufacturers to
support PDF files natively on printers, much like printers support some
low-level ASCII text. This may do the same thing as UniPrint gives us,
but without the need for the server in the middle.
Great idea or not, don't hold your breath. If Microsoft hasn't been able
to force printer vendors to make the DOC file format the default,
printer makers probably won't fall in line for the PDF idea, either. And
Adobe doesn't have the clout to push this on anyone, either, although
Adobe PDF support seems to be growing again.
Until the folks at Adobe can convince printer makers to get on board,
your best chance to ease printing woes is UniPrint from Qnetix. But
that's a pretty good option.
James