We have two printers here, a colour and a l/w printer. The folks at our lab are of the 'just make it work' type and don't care much about anything, so they just print to the colour printer, whether they need it coloured or not. of course, the price per page on this thing is about 3 times that of the regular printer, but why would they care...
So I am wondering what some strategies would look like to make sure they print b/w instead. We do not have a username or machine policy, so we cannot work with lpd accounting. Some approaches that have come to my mind: - impose a delay of several minutes. that has the problem that an urgent printout won't work, and people *will* forget to cancel jobs. - use a web interface to require prior authorisation... having to visit a page and entering some text will likely deter people. is there something out there that does this? can cups do this? - is there an accounter per IP address that we could install on the print server? What are your experiences? -- Please do not send copies of list mail to me; I read the list! .''`. martin f. krafft <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> : :' : proud Debian developer, admin, user, and author `. `'` `- Debian - when you have better things to do than fixing a system Invalid/expired PGP subkeys? Use subkeys.pgp.net as keyserver!
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