4Click Setup.
The Setup dialog box appears.
Note: You can also open the Setup dialog box from within many Windows
programs. Check your program documentation to see if you can change your
printer setup from within your program.
5Click the Fonts tab.
6Click Font Downloader.
The Font Downloader dialog box appears.
7Click Other.
A dialog box opens.
8Click the Format Device button, then click OK.
9Select the disk name and click OK.
Initializing the hard disk takes a few minutes. The Ready/In Use light on the
printer blinks until initialization is complete.
Printing to a PostScript file
As an alternative to printing your document on the printer, you can save a
PostScript language description of your document as a disk file. PostScript
language descriptions of documents can be useful for
m creating document archives
m printing documents without using the program that created them (at a
service bureau, for example)
m diagnosing printing problems
You may also want to print an encapsulated PostScript (EPS) file. You can use
EPS files to export single pages from one program to another. EPS files can
include any combination of text, graphics, and images, but they do not
describe complete documents. For example, by saving an EPS file, you can
insert a page of a document created with one program as an illustration in a
document created by another program.
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Windows 3.1 and DOS Users
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