How do you archive a printer driver once it has been installed?
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How do you archive a printer driver once it has been installed?<<drive file names snipped>>>
In another thread, we found a secret trick to get Windows 10 to install an x64 printer driver for an HP Laserjet 2100m printer which has been discontinued, hence the printer driver is no longer available on the HP
site nor is the printer driver part of the "normal" Windows 10 update process.
The printer driver for the HP LJ 2100 is only part of the "special"
temporary Windows 10 update process.
That's fine - but what if the special Windows update stops carrying that particular printer driver?
Just in case, is there an easy way to *archive* the printer driver?
Here's what I know from printing a test page after running the super-secret special temporary Windows 10 update:
- Windows Printer Test Page
- You have correctly installed your HP LaserJet 2100 Series PCL5 on NAME
- Print Processor = hpzpplhn
- OS Environment = Windows x64
- Driver Name = HP LaserJet 2100 Series PCL 5
- Driver Type = Type 3 - User Mode
- Driver Version = 6.1.7233.0
- Additional Print Driver Files: C:\WINDOWS\system32\spool\DRIVERS\x64\3\HPZLSLHN.DLL
Given that above (which is all that I know), the question is:
How do you archive a printer driver once it has been installed?
http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_7-hardware/need-hp-laserjet-2100-printer-driver-for-a-windows/ff67dbf9-fca8-4b6f-a873-ade6e3b5434d?auth=1
Drivers (HP Laserjet 2100) - available for practically every OS including Windows 10 32/64bit
- http://h20564.www2.hp.com/hpsc/swd/public/readIndex?sp4ts.oid=59533&lang=en&cc=us
- http://tinyurl.com/zeog5bj
On Fri, 26 Aug 2016 14:14:59 -0400, Paul wrote:
http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_7-hardware/need-hp-laserjet-2100-printer-driver-for-a-windows/ff67dbf9-fca8-4b6f-a873-ade6e3b5434d?auth=1
This URL "implies" that there is a "universal printer driver": http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_7-hardware/need-hp-laserjet-2100-printer-driver-for-a-windows/ff67dbf9-fca8-4b6f-a873-ade6e3b5434d?auth=1
So there *is* a "universal" printer driver after all!
Which, the URL implies, supports the HP LJ 2100 that I have: http://h20564.www2.hp.com/hpsc/doc/public/display?docId=emr_na-c04324001#N107C4
But, that URL (and all that follow) only gets you the PARK kit, which is basically a roll-your-own-printer-driver kit - which for a layperson - is useless.
Bummer. The words were all there (HP universal printer driver) but the marketing is that you can write your own.
On Sat, 27 Aug 2016 10:41:57 +0100, wasbit wrote:
Drivers (HP Laserjet 2100) - available for practically every OS including
Windows 10 32/64bit
-
http://h20564.www2.hp.com/hpsc/swd/public/readIndex?sp4ts.oid=59533&lang=en&cc=us
- http://tinyurl.com/zeog5bj
Thats a propaganda lie put out by HP.
Nobody on the planet can *find* the driver at that URL for the Windows 10 x64.
No matter what buttons you hit, you get the 22MB PARK download, which is basically a roll-your-own-driver-from-scratch kit.
That's fine for IT professionals - but for the layperson, that web page is just a propaganda ploy by HP Marketing.
http://h20564.www2.hp.com/hpsc/swd/public/readIndex?sp4ts.oid=59533&lang=en&cc=us
http://h20564.www2.hp.com/hpsc/swd/public/readIndex?sp4ts.oid=59533&lang=en&cc=us
Apparently you did not open the URL It list drivers for Windows 10 both
32 and 64 bit
What is also surprising is that it list drivers for Windows 3.1 MS Dos
and unix. And the big surprise is that there a driver for OS/2
The catalog.update.microsoft.com site uses an ActiveX plugin.
The ActiveX plugin runs the "Shopping Cart" interface
provided on the catalog server.
It allows you to queue up a bunch of downloads, like
search for 30 different items, and "add them to your cart".
Then, once you start the download, you can go off and
make dinner while it downloads.
The list of downloads could be stored in a cookie, or
a cookie could be used to sync a server-side grocery
list.
The reason for the ActiveX plugin, is to give
the user that capability. When asked to install the
ActiveX plugin, give it permission.
Microsoft "promises" to modify the Catalog site design,
but given how Microsoft is also going to fuck over
Win7 and Win8 updates anyway, I just assume they're
not doing anything at the moment.
If you use Internet Explorer, even Internet Explorer 6,
you will be able to use catalog.update.microsoft.com .
How do you archive a printer driver once it has been installed?
The catalog.update.microsoft.com site uses an ActiveX plugin.
The ActiveX plugin runs the "Shopping Cart" interface
provided on the catalog server.
It allows you to queue up a bunch of downloads, like
search for 30 different items, and "add them to your cart".
Then, once you start the download, you can go off and
make dinner while it downloads.
The list of downloads could be stored in a cookie, or
a cookie could be used to sync a server-side grocery
list.
The reason for the ActiveX plugin, is to give
the user that capability. When asked to install the
ActiveX plugin, give it permission.
Microsoft "promises" to modify the Catalog site design,
but given how Microsoft is also going to fuck over
Win7 and Win8 updates anyway, I just assume they're
not doing anything at the moment.
If you use Internet Explorer, even Internet Explorer 6,
you will be able to use catalog.update.microsoft.com .
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