Kyocera 10/100 Base TX (FollowMe ® Enabled - Copy Patrol)
A 10baseT/100baseTX Fast Ethernet Printserver with Dual Voltage and DMA for 5Volt and 3.3Volt (FollowMe Enabled + On-Board Copy Patrol)
Ringdale’s 10/100baseTX Ethernet Printserver offers users a simple connection between any Kyocera KUIO Printer and a 10/100baseTX network. This new printserver’s Dual Voltage capability allows it to be used with any Kyocera KUIO Printer, both the original 5Volt and the new energy-saving 3.3Volt. It has the flexibility to protect user investment, when changing from a 10baseT to a 100baseTX environment.
Using any of Ringdale's FollowMe Printing readers offers your printer additional Accounting and Access Control features. Simply plug in the reader to the printserver’s serial port. FollowMe Printing allows a document to be sent from any Windows PC to a secure FollowMe Printing Q-Server software suite. It uses a variety of recognition techniques to identify the user as the correct recipient of the document to be printed. Once you approach the printer or MFP (multifunction printer) with your recognition technique, only then will your document print.
Appealing to many companies is the credit facility, which may be set up for each user account. Individual users are assigned a set amount of credits, preventing them from wasting unnecessary paper and toner. Time zones may be designated to prevent or allow users from printing at certain times. Accurate printing costs may also be calculated using the accounting feature, which provides a record of all prints detailing the user, printer, number of pages, time and date.
FollowMe Printing allows control of the print job from the client display via a pop up menu. This provides additional features such as “Print & Retain”, “Print & Delete”, “Delete”, View or Print job list, manipulate document details or request more copies after proof reading.
Additional on-board features include the use Copy Patrol, which allows the control of copier usage without the need for an external device. Other features include Direct Memory Access (DMA) providing a more efficient way of sending print jobs to the printer (as opposed to buffered memory access) effectively increasing the speed of transfer.
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