Your product is now linked to your Google Account and can be accessed from any Chromebook, computer, Apple or Android device with Internet access. Click Finish printer registration to complete setup and print a test page.Enter your Google Account username and password and click Sign in, or, if you don't have an account, click Sign up for a new Google Account and follow the on-screen instructions.Select the check box to agree to the Usage Advisory and click Next.If the option still doesn't appear, select the Firmware Update option and follow the on-screen instructions to update your product. Note: If you don't see the Google Cloud Print Services option, turn your product off and back on. PCWorld 7:51 am PDT Google continues its invasion of the desktop with a new feature that lets you use the search giant’s Cloud Print service from any Windows application capable. Select the Google Cloud Print Services option.Enter the IP address into the address bar of a web browser. You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Google Cloud Print Developers group.Locate your product's IP address on the network status sheet.Connect your device to the same network that your Epson product is using. ![]() Note: Make sure your Epson printer and computer are connected to the same network before starting the Google Cloud Print setup. Set up your Epson product for network printing, then follow the instructions below. You can also print from Chromebooks and the Google Chrome browser without drivers or cables. I got my bachelor's degree in IT, and as a Sales Engineer, I thoroughly enjoy sharing our cutting-edge software with the world.With a Google Account, you can print from your Apple or Android device to your Epson product. I joined PrinterLogic with a list of IT certifications, a passion to learn more, and a drive to help customers solve print-management headaches. The more I learned about technology and how it works, the more I couldn’t let go. I thought I would go into Mechanical or Civil Engineering until I discovered IT in 2014. Spin up a SaaS instance today by clicking here. If you aren’t a PrinterLogic SaaS customer your migration from Google Cloud Print is simple. You’ll have everything you love about Chrome OS, as well as one centralized print management platform for all your users, regardless of their operating system. With PrinterLogic, migrating from Google Cloud Print is a simple, painless experience. No more cloud printing, and no print servers required. Chromebook users won’t even notice anything changed-they can continue to print using the native Chrome OS printing interface, but now the print jobs will be spooled locally and sent directly to the printer. You are now ready to print directly to printers without sending print jobs to the cloud. Step 3: Keep Print Jobs on the Local Network With Bynders connector to Google Drive, users can sync. Printers are deployed locally to the Chromebook and print jobs are rendered and sent directly to the printer. Google Drive is a cloud-based storage service that enables users to store and access files online. Users can find printers they need and install them without having to call the helpdesk. End-users can also be empowered to self-install printers through the Chrome OS client extension. Existing Google Cloud Print printers will be silently converted to direct IP printers and made available to end user’s per existing auto-deployments. Through PrinterLogic’s SaaS admin interface, IT admins can setup printer deployment rules that will automatically deploy printers to Chromebooks when users login. You can print any open tabs in Chrome using Google Cloud Print. Step 2: Deploy Printers To Chromebook Users After you push this extension out, you have all the pieces in place to manage printers on Chromebooks. ![]() Any G-Suite license will work to push out the extension. PrinterLogic will provide you with a Chrome OS client extension that you can push out to your Chromebooks through your Google Admin Console. Here’s the part where we start to migrate from Google Cloud Print. ![]() Step 1: Deploy PrinterLogic’s Client Extension to Chromebooks using G-Suite So let’s talk about what it looks like to migrate from Google Cloud Print to centrally managed direct IP printing for Chromebook. Since PrinterLogic licensing is not user-based, there is no additional cost required to deploy this to Chrome OS users. This means you can deliver a Serverless Printing Infrastructure with a single management interface and avoid sending your print jobs to the cloud. The new PrinterLogic Chrome OS Client Extension empowers you to centrally manage direct IP printing for Chromebook users alongside Windows, Mac, and Linux. By now you’ve heard that Google Cloud Print is on its way out, but at PrinterLogic we’ve developed the perfect migration option for you.
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