ankunger wrote:
Out of being curious, how do these guys work together? Apple has this upgrade where they know it will not be compatible with certain software. I received the message regarding Micro Soft programs but heard nothing regarding printers. It seems to me the consumer gets the brunt of things.
In no particular order...
HP designs and builds and sells those printers and scanners, and writes the software for HP products.
They have a vast and ever-changing collection of models of printers and scanners.
And a staggering number of drivers and apps across all those permutations.
Some of these devices will invariably age out with new Apple macOS or Microsoft Windows updates, too.
This isn’t specific to HP. Devices from all vendors age out, including devices and systems from Apple itself.
Apple provides early copies of new versions of macOS, iOS, and iPadOS for developers and vendors to work with and test with.
Apple has been pushing AirPrint and IPP/IPPS printing access as means of avoiding the need for add-on vendor-specific drivers.
As for Microsoft, Office 2016, Office 2019, and Office 365 should all work, if they’re patched to current.
Earlier Office versions do not, and there are other known issues with earlier Office versions on earlier macOS releases.
I’ve switched to Brother printers and scanners, and no longer run HP printers as they have aged out.