Wednesday, October 29th, 2008
Reading time: 2 – 3 minutes
This is a question that seems really odd to me, and I’m sure it does to you as well. I have actually found out that it does have some affect on Photoshop for whatever reason.
First let me brief you on the setup I had that brought up this issue. Earlier this year I bought myself a laptop (Dell XPS M1530) and connected it to my wireless network. I then setup my desktop computer to share its printers with the surrounding devices. It all worked fine even thought I noticed it was a bit slow when printing to the network printer.
I know that network printing is slower than local printing, so I didn’t think too much about it. I then had another problem that I thought was a separate issue from the slow printing. My Photoshop (CS3) was loading fast, but as soon as I opened an image it would freeze for a minute or two. I knew that the problem was not in my computers hardware as it is loaded with 4GB memory.
This is when I started hunting for why my Photoshop was slow when opening an image. I found out that it was an issue with my default printer being on a network. I put Adobe PDF as my default printer, and now Photoshop loaded images quick and without freezing.
I later found out that all I had to do to speed up my network printing was configure it differently. In essence, I tricked my computer into thinking it is local, but really it is on the network. Below are the steps I took:
I hope this article helps some of you out there with the same problem. Probably isn’t an overly common problem, but drop me a line if this works for you!
Tags: network, printing
Posted in Software | 5 Comments »
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