Sponsored Content
Special Forums Windows & DOS: Issues & Discussions Order of Adapters in Windows 7 Post 302591161 by fpmurphy on Wednesday 18th of January 2012 05:26:39 PM
Old 01-18-2012
I use Airprint for Windows. Works without any problems. See AirPrint on Windows and elsewhere.

If you want to play with the network adopter priority order in Windows 7

1. From the "Network And Sharing Center" window click "Change Adapter Settings"
2. On the "Network Connections" window, press the ALT key on your keyboard to being up the menu bar
3. Click the "Advanced" menu and then "Advanced Settings"
4. In the "Advanced Settings" window you will see the "Adapters and Bindings" tab and under "Connections" you will see the order they are in, you can use the arrows to the side to move the connection priority up and down.

Last edited by fpmurphy; 01-18-2012 at 06:32 PM..
 

5 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. AIX

20EE0008 : No adapters found Adapter, Riser, System Bd.

Hello, When I try to upgrade AIX from 5.1 to 5.3 I get this error message 20EE0008 : No adapters found Adapter, Riser, System Bd. Anyone know anything about it ? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: filosophizer
1 Replies

2. Red Hat

Designating Default Gateway for multiple networks/adapters

Hi I have 4 NIC's connected to my RHEL 5.3 server. Two on one subnet creating bond0, and two on a second subnet which create bond1. Both bonds are set to use DHCP to obtain IP addresses. Here is the config file for ifcfg-bond0: DHCP_HOSTNAME=rrnltshckvmx001 DEVICE=bond0 BOOTPROTO=dhcp... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Padow
2 Replies

3. AIX

VIO SEA Adapters

hi guys BTW pretty new to VIO I inherited 2 I BM Power Server - blades PS701 - One is already configured using en8 # lsdev -Cc adapter | grep ent ent0 Available Logical Host Ethernet Port (lp-hea) ent1 Available Logical Host Ethernet Port (lp-hea) ent2 Available 04-20... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: karlochacon
8 Replies

4. AIX

VIOS - fibre adapters not seeing luns

Hi guys, I've been trying to tackle this issue for days and I'm stumped. Hopefully someone can give more light on what else I can do. I have a p7 series box, with dual VIOS and 10 lpars and everything was working fine until I had to move the box to another location in the data centre. Ensured... (16 Replies)
Discussion started by: aixkidbee
16 Replies

5. Solaris

Cabling and adapters to communicate to service processor serial port from Windows PC with USB port.

Hello, I have an unloaded T5140 machine and want to access the ILOM for the first time and subsequently the network port after that., and then load Solaris 10 the final January 2011 build. The first part is what confuses me -the cabling. I am coming from a Windows machine (w/appropriate... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: joboy
5 Replies
WINDOWLAB(1x)															     WINDOWLAB(1x)

NAME
windowlab - a window manager for X11 SYNOPSIS
windowlab [options...] DESCRIPTION
windowlab is a small and simple window manager of novel design. It has a click-to-focus but not raise-on-focus policy, a window resizing mechanism that allows one or many edges of a window to be changed in one action, and an innovative menubar that shares the same part of the screen as the taskbar. Window titlebars are prevented from going off the edge of the screen by constraining the mouse pointer, and when appropriate the pointer is also constrained to the taskbar/menubar in order to make target menu items easier to hit. WindowLab places a taskbar at the top of the screen and adds a titlebar to the top of each window. These titlebars consist of a draggable area, and three icons on the right hand side. When left clicked, these icons: * hide the window * toggle the window's Z order Amiga style (if it's not at the front, bring it to the front, otherwise send it to the back) * close the window Another way of toggling a window's Z order (depth) is by double left clicking on the draggable part of its titlebar. Windows' titlebars are prevented from leaving the screen and cannot overlap the taskbar. The taskbar should list all windows currently in use. Left clicking on a window's taskbar item will give that window focus and toggle its Z order (depth). To resize the active window hold down alt and push against the window's edges with the left mouse button down. If you right click outside a client window, WindowLab's taskbar becomes a menubar. Releasing the right mouse button over a selected menu item will start a corresponding external program. WindowLab will look in each of the following files in turn for definitions of the menu labels and commands: * ~/.windowlab/windowlab.menurc * ../etc/windowlab.menurc (from the directory containing the executable) * /etc/X11/windowlab/windowlab.menurc Each line in the menurc file should have the menu label, a colon, and then the corresponding command, eg: The GIMP:gimp New windows (that don't specify their location) are positioned according to the coordinates of the mouse - the top-left hand corner of a new window is set to the location of the mouse pointer (if necessary the window will be moved to ensure that all of it is on the screen). WindowLab has the following keyboard controls. Hold down alt and press: * tab to give focus to the previous window * q to give focus to the next window * F11 to toggle fullscreen mode on and off for non transient windows * F12 to toggle the window's depth. This is the same as left clicking a window's middle icon OPTIONS
-font font-spec Draw window titles with the font defined by font-spec. -border color, -text color, -active color, -inactive color, -menu color, -selected color, -empty color Use color for the borders, the text, the active background, the inactive background, the menubar, the selected menu item and empty parts of the screen. -about Print information to stdout and exit. -display Sets which X display will be managed by windowlab. ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
DISPLAY Sets which X display will be managed by windowlab. MENU SYSTEM
This version of WindowLab supports the Debian Menu subsystem. To update the menus, it suffices to execute the command update-menus. If executed as root, the system setting in /etc/X11/windowlab/windowlab.menurc will be affected, whereas execution by any underprivileged user only effects the private resource file in ~/.windowlab/windowlab.menurc. The following files tune the compilation of auto-generated menus: /etc/X11/windowlab/debian_config, ~/.windowlab/debian_config Debian-specific system configuration and user-specific overrides. /etc/X11/windowlab/common_menu A common tail part, that currently encompasses About, Reload and Quit. All users get these entries included in their menu. ~/.windowlab/user_menu Menu entries hand-picked by the individual user. SIGNALS
When WindowLab receives a SIGHUP signal, it will reload all relevant menu resource files, thus updating the menu bar. SEE ALSO
X(7), The Inter-Client Communication Conventions Manual (from the X11R6 documentation). AUTHOR
Nick Gravgaard (me at nickgravgaard.com) Nick Gravgaard 1.40 WINDOWLAB(1x)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:20 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy