![]() Postscript drivers are generally best suited for printers that have built in RIPs that can handle postscript natively. A RIP (non-emulated) on the printer is typically faster as the OS is freed up to just send the raw print job without pre-processing. Other printers do this on the PC with the driver handling the RIP, or may have an emulated RIP. HP printers handle this at the printer on the fly with a built-in RIP. The thing to bear in mind with postscript is that during printing the vector image is converted to raster in a process called RIP, or raster image processing. Unless you output some very large PDFs I don't think you'll notice a difference, but give it a try your environment may be different then mine. Adobe Reader can usually work with PCL drivers just fine without much impact to performance. ![]() For example a vector graphics package like Quark, or Adobe Illustrator. Not really needed unless your application speaks postscript natively. Loading both 32 and 64 bit is a good idea to give you flexibility if you have a mix of hosts. But, it is generally a good idea to stay as current. As far as loading Win 7 drivers on your print server you'll probably want to unless you already have Vista drivers loaded.
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