Printing electronic reserve material can be slow under certain conditions.
Factors in the speed of printing:
- Your network connection. Printing from a LocalTalk or Ethernet connection is faster than a dialup connection. Expect faster print times if you are working from a workstation in the library or at a networked computer on campus. Printing from a dialup connection is often extremely slow.
- The type of printer you are using will have an impact on print job times. Deskjets, Deskwriters and Bubblejet printers are slower than laser printers.
- The speed of the computer you are using plays a role in printing times. A computer that successfully handles Netscape or Microsoft Internet Explorer should be appropriate for printing electronic reserve files.
- If you are accessing from a dial-up connection, consider downloading your material to a disk or hard drive. Please note: Your connection can be cut when downloading a large file over a modem. If this occurs, you must start over.
Practical examples of print times under various conditions:
The networked LaserJet printer on the first floor of Regenstein produced an 11 page electronic reserve text document in 3 minutes. The same document took 10 minutes to print on a BubbleJet printer and 40 minutes to print through a dialup connection.
