Path: utzoo!attcan!uunet!snorkelwacker!usc!cs.utexas.edu!yale!venus!yalevm!storobb From: STOROBB@YaleVM.YCC.Yale.Edu Newsgroups: comp.periphs.printers Subject: Re: Help Needed with PC/NFS and HP Laserjet II setup Message-ID: <90038.135332STOROBB@YALEVM.BITNET> Date: 7 Feb 90 18:53:32 GMT References: <202@audfax.audiofax.com> <7899@chaph.usc.edu> Organization: Yale University Lines: 19 The network you describe, with PCs and unix workstations happily interacting, is fairly easy to implement with either of two Sun products. TOPS is a neat little network; it supposedly can connect Macs, PCs, and NFS unix machines. I haven't had any real experience with it, though. We are setting up an Ethernet network here, connecting PCs into our Sun 4s (SPARCs). Sun sells a software package, PC/NFS, that runs in one of two modes. Either the PC sees the Sun peripherals (disks, printers) as DOS devices (D:, LPT2:) that can be used directly by any DOS program. Alternatively, the PC can be turned into a unix terminal rlogged into a workstation (text only). Sun also sells a few bells and whistles (called "lifeline") that ties you into the Sun mail system and allows you to use the Suns as a backup device. The cost of PC/NFS is about $400 (software only, heavily discountable); lifeline is an extra $125 (non-discountable). We have a PostScript printer (the new IBM one) attached to the network; it doesn't seem to suffer the same problems as the HP LaserJet seems to. Robert Stoddard