Bethel's Shooting Too Much For Mac
Summary The following Knowledge Base articles will help you install network printers and answer questions about printing at Bethel University locations. Installing the 'Follow-Me-Printer' The 'Follow-Me-Printer', which allows you to print to one place and pick up the print job at any printer with a card scanner attached, is installed automatically on any Bethel owned computer.
If you want to install the printer on a personal computer, or you need to re-install the printer for some reason, follow the steps below for your device. Linux Note: Installing this printer for Linux requires that you have CUPS installed. If you don't have CUPS, or the printer install fails, please search for information about installing CUPS into your Linux distribution. Download the installer using this link:. Open a Terminal window, and type 'sudo sh ' (notice the space after 'sh'). Locate the downloaded file and drag it into the terminal window. The result should be something like this: user@ubuntu:$ sudo sh '/home/user/Downloads/Bethel Follow-Me-Printer.run'.
Bethel's Shooting Too Much For Macbook Pro
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Hit 'Enter', then enter your Linux account password. The printer should now be installed. Depending on the application that you are printing from, the first time you try to print, a window may open asking you to authenticate. In the authentication window, enter your Bethel credentials with your username in the form 'bu username', then enter your Bethel password. You may also choose to select the option to save the password for future printing. If the authentication window does not show up, you may have the option to authenticate the print job from the print queue. Open the print queue. Right-click on the print job (It should have a status of 'Held for Authentication'). Choose Authenticate, and the authentication window will open.
Enter your credentials as explained above. If neither of these authentication options work when printing from your application, you can try printing from another application, or printing to a PDF file for printing from another system or from a PDF reader application. If you can get authentication to work in one application, and save your credentials, it will most likely work from any other application from that point on. Mobile Device.
Many Google Apps including Gmail and Drive will allow you to print to Follow-Me-Printer through Google Cloud Print. To print from your mobile device email your print job to. If you email from your Bethel email address, your job will automatically be available to print once you login to a printer. If you send from a non-Bethel email address you will receive a follow up email with a “job code” to enter into a printer to release your print job.
Bethel employees can request a license of that allows printing from any application. Logging in to the Follow-Me-Printer.
To release print jobs, scan, or copy, you will log in by scanning your Bethel ID card or by selecting AD Login on the screen and entering your Bethel username and password. If you do not have your Bethel ID card with you, use the AD Login option to enter your Bethel username and password instead.
If your ID card shows up as a different name, you will need to go to Print Services (AC 3rd floor) to get your ID card configured properly for printing. Bethel ID Requirements. If you are unable to register your Bethel ID card for printing, it is likely that you do not have a proximity card. Most older, and some newer Bethel ID cards do not have proximity ability. Proximity cards have an HID logo on the backside upper right hand corner. If you do not have a proximity card, or if you need a replacement card, you can find more information here:.
Important Facts. The default for all printing is Black & White, duplex (2-sided).
After logging in you will have the option to choose the appropriate cost center associated with your print job. For example, “personal” or department cost center.
Currently this is for reporting purpose only. Your unprinted jobs remain available for 72 hours. For detailed information review the Bethel University User’s Print Guide located at For support, please contact the Print Care Specialist at 651-635-8613. Installing Other Bethel Printers To install a Bethel printer use the following articles for your type of computer, you will need to know the name of the printer you are wanting to print to. The name of the printer is located on a Bethel sticker on the front of the machine. The most common printers on campus are those located in the.
As per the title, I'm curious what Mac hardware everyone uses for their photography and how they use it. Me personally as a keen amateur, I use a 2012 i7 quad core mini with upgraded SSD and 16GB RAM hooked up to a Benq 27' monitor. I use this for a number of tasks including Photo DAM using Apple Photos. For editing, I mainly use a combination of Photos, Affinity Photo and Luminar 2018 supplemented with some additional software such as Pixelmator, Nik Collection and RAW Power. I switched to this from a rMBP 15 since I was typically editing in my home office most of the time anyway and using the external monitor. I already had the Mac Mini on 24/7 as a server anyway so it made sense and proceeded with a quick bump in RAM and the drive. Although the mini works great and in general is a quick machine, the integrated GPU is really starting to show its age so contemplating an upgrade to a new iMac if we get new hardware announced this year.
What are others using? 2016 rMBP 16GB RAM and whatever the processor mid-spec was at the time. 2.6Ghz quad i5 I think. I use that when travelling and for personal laptop use. My main rig for editing is actually a PC. It is a HP Z1 series all in one workstation with an 8 core Xeon extreme and 24GB of RAM, 512GB SSD and a Synology NAS hard wired over Gbps network. It is in need of replacing but I got it for free from work so cant justify hating it.
Also, Apple pricing is going the way of Louis Vuitton i.e. Strategy is “how much can we get away with charging?” Rather than “how much is it worth?”. So I may be staying with a PC for a while. Over £3K for a new MBP? Erm nope, not for personal use.
Tools are 90% Lightroom, splash of Photoshop and some NIK tools. I have bought far too many presets - tip: don’t ever buy presets they are a waste of money but at $5 a hit they creep up on you. I have tried CaptureOne, didn’t like it (felt too much of learning curve from LR - just because of what I am used to, no foul on CaptureOne’s part).
Tried Affinity and Luminar, again, as Lightroom ingrained in me now I am finding it hard to switch. Like I too struggle with spot removal and adjustment brush in LR. Crappy buggy software! Need to leave them until the end after cropping and then zoom in while using them to get it to continue to work. Click to expand.I can do oodles of work in PS with no spinning fans.
The only time the fans spin are in LR with the adjustment brush and exporting. A little bit with a larger import. For import/export I can just let it run or walk away if I need, but it doesn't affect the performance of other programs if I want to let it run inthe background. The adjustment brush is really wonky and I can get a rainbow ball with it as well as fans, but I just swear and get on with it. I keep hoping that eventually Adobe will improve performance, especially since other vendors are trying to enter the market.
But I probably will just keep hoping. At the moment I am using a 2015 15' MBP and no external monitor.
It replaced a 2012 21.5' iMac which had become too slow and annoying. At the time I had been anticipating the arrival of the first 21.5' iMac with retina screen, but when it was finally released in the autumn of 2015, I was disappointed in the specs and after some research and much thought chose to go with the MBP instead, figuring that I would pick up an external monitor. I wasn't really doing much photo editing and haven't, really, until this summer, so now I am definitely thinking that I'll be making some changes in my setup this fall. I really like the flexibility of the MBP as opposed to an iMac and although I have desk space enough for a 27' iMac I just cannot wrestle one around physically, so would not consider that size anyway, it would have to be the 21.5' if I got another iMac, which is pretty doubtful at this point. My current MBP has 512 SSD and 16 GB RAM and so far that has been fine for image processing, and I use external SSDs (Samsung T series and a couple of G-Drive Mobile SSDs) for supplementary storage and backup.
The Samsung T3s and T5s are the current/more recent backups and supplementary drives for everything and the G-Drives are used specifically for photography image files. Older external HDDs are now used just for archival files. I have mirror duplicates of my backups and my Photo files, with one copy of a backup and one copy of a Photo drive going to my safe deposit box at the bank each month. I am considering one of the new 2018 MBPs with 32 GB RAM and 1 TB SSD, which should make a difference in speed when importing, editing and exporting image files, but yeah, they do cost a fair amount of $$$!!! Between thinking about that and thinking about a new camera, it's likely to be an expensive fall! I am also mulling over the idea of waiting to do anything about computers until we see what Apple has to offer in the way of iMac updates in the next couple months.
As for what I use for editing and processing images. I have been using Aperture since its inception and arrival on the scene and I have been clinging to it even as Apple stopped supporting it and even as we've gone though several versions of the OS where I could still use it. Up until this summer it didn't really matter all that much but now that I'm shooting much more frequently and in greater volume than I had for a long time, it's become a rather important issue after all. I've been trialling various programs and so far have purchased two - Luminar 2018 and Capture One Pro 11 for Sony. I'm still trying to learn Capture One, but I really like Luminar.
If they would only hurry up with that catalog/DAM they've been promising. I'm not crazy about the idea of a subscription-based service so have not looked into Lightroom and Photoshop. I did use PS in years past but when Aperture came along I found that I was pretty much ignoring CS3, the last version of PS that I had, and so never updated beyond it and when moving to a new computer never bothered installing CS3 in it. Lightroom and Aperture came out at around the same time, and I vaguely remember doing a trial of LR and deciding that I much preferred Aperture, so never have looked at LR since then. I also have Affinity Photo and Pixelmator but never quite felt at home in either of those, so they aren't getting much use. I also use Sony's Imaging Edge for looking at my RAW images from the RX100 M6, as that camera is so new that not every editing software has the ability to convert images from its RAW output yet.
RAW Power does, and Fast RAW Viewer, though. I also have Graphics Converter and am planning to eventually use it to organize my image files much better. I'm also in the midst of a trial of Photo Supreme - haven't yet made up my mind on that one, whether or not to purchase it. Quite a while ago I downloaded the NIK Collection when it was still free from Google, but have never actually installed the program, either as a standalone or as a plug-in; probably won't bother now, as I haven't felt a pressing need for it. Basically, at the moment I'm in a state of flux as I try out various options to find a good fit for me and my working style. Currently an ageing 21.5' iMac with 1TB hard drive and 16GB of RAM.
Paired with an 24' monitor for photo work. Getting quite a few beach balls etc. Really need an upgrade but I'm not buying another iMac as the glossy screen is a no for me (I see a pair of 27' BenQ's in the not too distant future!). But the Mac Pro and Mac mini are both terribly out of date and over priced. I don't need or want a portable. So just watching and waiting like many others.
At least I'll have an iPhone XS+ in the not too distant future to satisfy my GAS. Post Merged, Sep 6, 2018 -Currently an ageing 21.5' iMac with 1TB hard drive and 16GB of RAM. Paired with an 24' monitor for photo work.
Getting quite a few beach balls etc. Really need an upgrade but I'm not buying another iMac as the glossy screen is a no for me (I see a pair of 27' BenQ's in the not too distant future!).
But the Mac Pro and Mac mini are both terribly out of date and over priced. I don't need or want a portable. So just watching and waiting like many others.
At least I'll have an iPhone XS+ in the not too distant future to satisfy my GAS. Click to expand.I really like it. I like the SD slot, keyboard and MagSafe 2 charger (brick is awful though). I really don’t like the new keyboards and think the new MacBook Pro models are horrendously overpriced for what they are.
That MBP of mine cost £1999 and the equivalent these days works out around £3300. I paid £1700 for mine thanks to a great student discount at the time but even that scheme has been reduced significantly. The upgrade to a standard 16Gb RAM from 8Gb had just happened and I bought it a couple of months before a price hike. Mid 2012 15' MacBook Pro (matte screen).
2.7GHz Quad-core 17 w/ 16GB RAM and a 256GB Samsung SSD where the DVD (gasp!) used to be. This machine is coupled with a Dell 24' monitor of some description and a medium Wacom Intous Pro. As a former manager of an Apple store I had a new machine every year, some times 2 or 3 when Apple used to release multiple refreshes 12 month period. This all changed when the rMBP's came out.
I knew I had to keep this thing as I didn't want a gloss screen and couldn't support the gluing / soldering in off parts. This'll be my last Mac and when it dies I'll replace it with a Windows desktop workstation as I don't need portability and I don't care for the Mac OS anymore (hello Finder you POS). Besides, I pretty much live in Photoshop, Lightroom and Chrome and they work better on Windows these days. Mid 2012 15' MacBook Pro (matte screen). 2.7GHz Quad-core 17 w/ 16GB RAM and a 256GB Samsung SSD where the DVD (gasp!) used to be.
This machine is coupled with a Dell 24' monitor of some description and a medium Wacom Intous Pro. As a former manager of an Apple store I had a new machine every year, some times 2 or 3 when Apple used to release multiple refreshes 12 month period. This all changed when the rMBP's came out.
I knew I had to keep this thing as I didn't want a gloss screen and couldn't support the gluing / soldering in off parts. This'll be my last Mac and when it dies I'll replace it with a Windows desktop workstation as I don't need portability and I don't care for the Mac OS anymore (hello Finder you POS). Besides, I pretty much live in Photoshop, Lightroom and Chrome and they work better on Windows these days.