Can't print wirelessly since Java for Mac OS X 10.5 Update 4

I have an HP Officejet J4680 All-in-One, and have been printing wirelessly from my Macintosh (OS 10.5.7) since I purchased the printer in December 2008. However, after I installed the Java for Mac OS X 10.5 Update 4, I suddenly lost the ability to print wirelessly. I've spent hours on my own and on the phone with HP trying to figure this out, with no success. When I uninstall and reinstall the printer, I can get to the point in the HP Setup Assistant in which the network configuration has been successfully downloaded to the printer (I see an IP address, Subnet Mask, etc.), but then I get an error message of "Device Not Reachable . . . please make sure that your Mac has access to the network and retry." My Mac does have access to the network because I can get on the internet wirelessly.

I've tried entering the IP address manually, etc.--but nothing has worked. It's as if the printer is on the network, and the computer is on the same network, but they somehow can't talk to each other. Anyone else notice this problem, and how do I solve it?? Thanks in advance for your time!

MacBook, Mac OS X (10.5.7)

Posted on Jul 9, 2009 10:16 PM

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4 replies

Jul 10, 2009 12:32 AM in response to Laura C.

Hello Laura C. I haven't noticed any problems with my wireless connections to my Canon printers, at home or at work, and I have the Update 4 installed. I also cannot think how this update would have impacted your ability to connect to the printer, except maybe due to a reliance of the HP software using Java to operate. But this should not have stopped your existing connection from working, only a new connection...

Apologies in advance if you have already been through the following, but if you were successful in entering an IP address manually, I would then check that you can get a response from the printer. The best tool to use is Ping. Open Applications > Utilities > Network Utility. Here you will see the Ping tab, as well as several other IP tools.

Before you select Ping, select Info (it probably has defaulted to this). This pane shows you the current IP address settings for your Mac. Since you are using wireless, change the drop menu from en0 (which is Ethernet) to en1 (wireless). This will show your current IP address set in the Mac. Make a note of this.

Now select the Ping tab and enter the IP address of the HP. Change the number of pings to 4 and press the Ping button. If the addresses are correct and the network infrastructure working you should get a response. If you get something like " 4 packets transmitted, 0 packets received, 100% packet loss", then that would explain the unreachable message.

The biggest cause of this symptom is subnetting. To explain further, an IP address consists of two parts, the subnet and network address. The subnet is determined by the subnet mask. If you have a subnet mask of 255.255.255.0, the your subnet is the first three sets of numbers in your IP address and the network address is the last number. For example, an IP address of 10.0.1.10 and subnet mask of 255.255.255.0 has a subnet of 10.0.1 and a network address of 10. For devices to communicate on a local network, they typically need to have the same subnet and a different network address. Can you confirm the subnets for the Mac and printer are the same and the network addresses are different.

If you get responses to the Pings, which indicates the IP addressing is okay, the other services like firewalls can stop some printer utilities from working correctly. Have you checked your System Preferences > Security > Firewall setting is set to allow all incoming connections?

HTH

Pahu

Jul 10, 2009 1:24 PM in response to PAHU

Hi Pahu,

Thanks so much for your helpful reply. I'm not sure that the problem has anything to do with the Java update (it sounds like from what you are saying, probably not), but after spending hours in HP support they seemed to think it was related to my Mac, and the timing seemed suspect.

I did get responses to the Pings: "4 packets transmitted, 4 packets received, 0% packet loss
round-trip min/avg/max/stddev = 3.140/4.191/6.495/1.342 ms"

I confirmed that the Firewall is allowing all incoming connections.

Any other ideas?

Thanks again!

Laura

Jul 10, 2009 8:06 PM in response to Laura C.

Hi Laura,

Now that you have confirmed the connection is good to the printer, I think the next thing you can try is to create a printer using an alternate driver. This would help to narrow down the cause, which is sounding like the HP installer. However, from reading other posts about connections to HP printers, you may have to look at using the hpijs package ( http://www.linuxfoundation.org/en/OpenPrinting/MacOSX/hpijs) which has a number of required steps. With the hpijs installed, you could add the printer queue as IP > HP Jetdirect-Socket. This requires you to enter the IP address of the printer and then browsing for the relevant printer model in the Print using menu.

Pahu

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Can't print wirelessly since Java for Mac OS X 10.5 Update 4

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