![]() |
|
Welcome to Vista Banter. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions, articles and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to ask questions and reply to others posts, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact support. |
|
|||||||
| Printing, Faxing and Scanning with Vista A forum for using printers, scanners and fx with Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.print_fax_scan) |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
Printer set up locally (USB) on an XP PC and shared. Two new Dell Vista PCs
on the network, each with suitable printer driver. When first set up all was working just fine. 2-3 days later they started to be intermittent. Recently it is not possible to print from either of the Vista PCs, first thing in the day for about 1-2 hours. Other XP PCs can print to it just fine. I looked first thing today, after the PC had been on overnight, with user logged in but PC locked. I used her password to unlock. Printer properties showed no port defined at all! I tried adding but "Add port dialog cannot be displayed. Operation could not be completed (error 0x0000007b)." I tried to enter properties as (network) administrator: "Printer properties cannot be displayed. Access is denied" While still trying to trace the solution the port appeared and printing was OK. However when I looked at printer properties I could do that as the user but when I tried to do that as administrator I could not! “Printer properties cannot be displayed. Access is denied" It’s driving me nuts. Any ideas, please? There are no scheduled tasks which suddenly start and I had neither logged off/on nor restarted the PC. The other Vista PC also started to print at much the same time. The other two XPs in the department could print all along. |