Tuesday, February 07, 2012
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Author: Created: 11/14/2007 11:06 AM
In "Knowledge Base" I hope to give back to the community of online programming help that I have relied on so heavily all these years. I will try to document any technical "discoveries" that I make during my work.
By Larry Daniele on 11/19/2007 11:20 AM

I finally got my HP PhotoSmart 7350 to work with my Mac iBook G4 running OS X 10.4 (Tiger) (after nearly two years of banging my head against the wall trying to get the standard HP driver to work in any fashion). Here's how:

  1. Go to The Linux Foundation OpenPrinting/MacOSX/hpijs drivers page.
  2. Download and install from that page (in this order): ESP Ghostscript, Foomatic-RIP and finally the hpijs package.
  3. Go to the Mac Printer Setup Utility (in Applications/Utilities) and add your printer (e.g. "HP PhotoSmart 7350 Foomatic/hpijs" under "HP").

I was even able to get this working with a Linksys WPS58G wireless-G print server by setting up an "IP Printer"  with Protocol set to  "HP Jet Direct - Socket" ,  Address to the IP address of the print server (e.g. 192.168.20.200).

I hope this may help someone else who is struggling with this.

By Larry Daniele on 11/14/2007 5:04 PM
As of DotNetNuke (DNN) 4.7, the RSS News Feed module doesn't display embedded HTML in the Description field because the default transform (RSS91.xsl) in the "DesktopModules\News" folder. The solution is basically to change:

to:

You could edit this file directly so it would apply to all news feeds you put on your system. However, if you want to control which feeds are allowed to inject arbitrary HTML into your site, then the "clean" way to do this (without changing the DNN installation itself) is to:

Make a copy of the default RSS91.xsl on your local system. Make the change shown above (and any other formatting changes you might want). Upload this file into your DotNetNuke files. (I put mine in a "Transforms" folder.) Reference this file in the Settings for your News module in the News Feed Style Sheet section. ...
By Larry Daniele on 11/14/2007 11:23 AM
Describes how to display a clock on a web page using a minimum of JavaScript code.
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