Hello,

Due to a server move, I recently switched our print server from a 32-bit
server to a AMD64 server. On some of the workstations now, we are unable to
view the printer properties. I only get a message "Printer Properties can
not be displayed. Operation could not be completed." The workstations this
is happening on are the Windows 2000 computers, the XP computers work
correctly.

I was able to locate MS KB Article 908786, which describes this problem
exactly. The problem is that the article says the problem occurs on Windows
2003, XP and 2000, but then provides resolutions (sort of) for Windows 2003
and XP only. It doesn't give any suggestions for Windows 2000 computers.

All of the Windows 2000 computers are service pack 4 and updated with the
most recent updates. We cannot update them to Windows XP as we are a school
that relies heavily on donated computers and use the MS FreshStart program
for our OS (they don't currently offer XP for the FreshStart program). We
don't have the budget to purchase new OSes for all the computers.

As the old server is being moved to a different campus, the only server we
have available is the 64-bit one (and a workstation that has Windows Server
2003 installed on it, but it isn't capable of handling the extra burden (no
matter how small is it) of being a print server). Does any one know of any
hotfixes or patches or suggestions that I can try that will allow this print
server to serve the needs of our old computers?

Any help is appreciated. Thanks.

Re: 64-bit print server causing problems with 32-bit workstations by Alan

Alan
Thu May 31 12:22:31 CDT 2007

There is not a solution for Win2k for Point and Print connections.

You can add the printer as a local printer on these systems creating a Local
Port with \\printserver\printshare as the port name. You can also install
LPD Service on the print server and use Standard TCP/IP ports with LPR byte
count enabled to print to the server.

The print jobs will be rendered on the client and there will be no RPC calls
to the x64 machine to determine the processor type and fail as it does now.



--
Alan Morris
Windows Printing Team
Search the Microsoft Knowledge Base here:
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=fh;[ln];kbhowto

This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights.

"pta403" <pta403@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:75D2D201-2483-4AB2-9486-C9A8332F0487@microsoft.com...
> Hello,
>
> Due to a server move, I recently switched our print server from a 32-bit
> server to a AMD64 server. On some of the workstations now, we are unable
> to
> view the printer properties. I only get a message "Printer Properties can
> not be displayed. Operation could not be completed." The workstations
> this
> is happening on are the Windows 2000 computers, the XP computers work
> correctly.
>
> I was able to locate MS KB Article 908786, which describes this problem
> exactly. The problem is that the article says the problem occurs on
> Windows
> 2003, XP and 2000, but then provides resolutions (sort of) for Windows
> 2003
> and XP only. It doesn't give any suggestions for Windows 2000 computers.
>
> All of the Windows 2000 computers are service pack 4 and updated with the
> most recent updates. We cannot update them to Windows XP as we are a
> school
> that relies heavily on donated computers and use the MS FreshStart program
> for our OS (they don't currently offer XP for the FreshStart program). We
> don't have the budget to purchase new OSes for all the computers.
>
> As the old server is being moved to a different campus, the only server we
> have available is the 64-bit one (and a workstation that has Windows
> Server
> 2003 installed on it, but it isn't capable of handling the extra burden
> (no
> matter how small is it) of being a print server). Does any one know of
> any
> hotfixes or patches or suggestions that I can try that will allow this
> print
> server to serve the needs of our old computers?
>
> Any help is appreciated. Thanks.
>
>



Re: 64-bit print server causing problems with 32-bit workstations by pta403

pta403
Thu May 31 14:19:00 CDT 2007

Thank you very much for the tips. Can you tell me how to "install LPD
Service on the print server and use Standard TCP/IP ports with LPR byte count
enabled to print to the server"? I think I already have it set to use
Standard TCP/IP ports, but I'm not sure where to find the LPD service to
install or how to enable LPR byte count.

"Alan Morris [MSFT]" wrote:

> There is not a solution for Win2k for Point and Print connections.
>
> You can add the printer as a local printer on these systems creating a Local
> Port with \\printserver\printshare as the port name. You can also install
> LPD Service on the print server and use Standard TCP/IP ports with LPR byte
> count enabled to print to the server.
>
> The print jobs will be rendered on the client and there will be no RPC calls
> to the x64 machine to determine the processor type and fail as it does now.
>
>
>
> --
> Alan Morris
> Windows Printing Team
> Search the Microsoft Knowledge Base here:
> http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=fh;[ln];kbhowto
>
> This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights.
>
> "pta403" <pta403@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
> news:75D2D201-2483-4AB2-9486-C9A8332F0487@microsoft.com...
> > Hello,
> >
> > Due to a server move, I recently switched our print server from a 32-bit
> > server to a AMD64 server. On some of the workstations now, we are unable
> > to
> > view the printer properties. I only get a message "Printer Properties can
> > not be displayed. Operation could not be completed." The workstations
> > this
> > is happening on are the Windows 2000 computers, the XP computers work
> > correctly.
> >
> > I was able to locate MS KB Article 908786, which describes this problem
> > exactly. The problem is that the article says the problem occurs on
> > Windows
> > 2003, XP and 2000, but then provides resolutions (sort of) for Windows
> > 2003
> > and XP only. It doesn't give any suggestions for Windows 2000 computers.
> >
> > All of the Windows 2000 computers are service pack 4 and updated with the
> > most recent updates. We cannot update them to Windows XP as we are a
> > school
> > that relies heavily on donated computers and use the MS FreshStart program
> > for our OS (they don't currently offer XP for the FreshStart program). We
> > don't have the budget to purchase new OSes for all the computers.
> >
> > As the old server is being moved to a different campus, the only server we
> > have available is the 64-bit one (and a workstation that has Windows
> > Server
> > 2003 installed on it, but it isn't capable of handling the extra burden
> > (no
> > matter how small is it) of being a print server). Does any one know of
> > any
> > hotfixes or patches or suggestions that I can try that will allow this
> > print
> > server to serve the needs of our old computers?
> >
> > Any help is appreciated. Thanks.
> >
> >
>
>
>

Re: 64-bit print server causing problems with 32-bit workstations by Alan

Alan
Thu May 31 17:26:23 CDT 2007

On your print server
Add Remove Programs, Windows Components, Other File and Print Services,
Print Services for Unix

This will install the LPD service on the print server to receive inbound
print jobs over the lpr protocols.

On the client add the Standard Port using the print server name as the host
name. The default Port name will also be the host name and I generally
change this to also include the queue name as well.

The monitor will perform an SNMP query to the print server which will fail
after 90 seconds. Use the Custom configuration to set the protocol to LPR
and enter the queue name as the print share name. Check LPR Byte Counting
Enabled under the queue name

You can add the ports and the local printers remotely to the Win2k
workstations.

--
Alan Morris
Windows Printing Team
Search the Microsoft Knowledge Base here:
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=fh;[ln];kbhowto

This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights.

"pta403" <pta403@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:9B51DBE7-0474-4682-BCCF-F5B4CD87854A@microsoft.com...
> Thank you very much for the tips. Can you tell me how to "install LPD
> Service on the print server and use Standard TCP/IP ports with LPR byte
> count
> enabled to print to the server"? I think I already have it set to use
> Standard TCP/IP ports, but I'm not sure where to find the LPD service to
> install or how to enable LPR byte count.
>
> "Alan Morris [MSFT]" wrote:
>
>> There is not a solution for Win2k for Point and Print connections.
>>
>> You can add the printer as a local printer on these systems creating a
>> Local
>> Port with \\printserver\printshare as the port name. You can also
>> install
>> LPD Service on the print server and use Standard TCP/IP ports with LPR
>> byte
>> count enabled to print to the server.
>>
>> The print jobs will be rendered on the client and there will be no RPC
>> calls
>> to the x64 machine to determine the processor type and fail as it does
>> now.
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Alan Morris
>> Windows Printing Team
>> Search the Microsoft Knowledge Base here:
>> http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=fh;[ln];kbhowto
>>
>> This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no
>> rights.
>>
>> "pta403" <pta403@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
>> news:75D2D201-2483-4AB2-9486-C9A8332F0487@microsoft.com...
>> > Hello,
>> >
>> > Due to a server move, I recently switched our print server from a
>> > 32-bit
>> > server to a AMD64 server. On some of the workstations now, we are
>> > unable
>> > to
>> > view the printer properties. I only get a message "Printer Properties
>> > can
>> > not be displayed. Operation could not be completed." The workstations
>> > this
>> > is happening on are the Windows 2000 computers, the XP computers work
>> > correctly.
>> >
>> > I was able to locate MS KB Article 908786, which describes this problem
>> > exactly. The problem is that the article says the problem occurs on
>> > Windows
>> > 2003, XP and 2000, but then provides resolutions (sort of) for Windows
>> > 2003
>> > and XP only. It doesn't give any suggestions for Windows 2000
>> > computers.
>> >
>> > All of the Windows 2000 computers are service pack 4 and updated with
>> > the
>> > most recent updates. We cannot update them to Windows XP as we are a
>> > school
>> > that relies heavily on donated computers and use the MS FreshStart
>> > program
>> > for our OS (they don't currently offer XP for the FreshStart program).
>> > We
>> > don't have the budget to purchase new OSes for all the computers.
>> >
>> > As the old server is being moved to a different campus, the only server
>> > we
>> > have available is the 64-bit one (and a workstation that has Windows
>> > Server
>> > 2003 installed on it, but it isn't capable of handling the extra burden
>> > (no
>> > matter how small is it) of being a print server). Does any one know of
>> > any
>> > hotfixes or patches or suggestions that I can try that will allow this
>> > print
>> > server to serve the needs of our old computers?
>> >
>> > Any help is appreciated. Thanks.
>> >
>> >
>>
>>
>>