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- What is Mopier and what does it do?
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01-11-2016 09:49 AM
I ran into a problem with a cost recovery system that was not tracking my printing correctly, so the vendor asked that I turn off Mopier Mode. That fixed the problem, but they could not explain what Mopier is. I'm looking to get a better understanding on what is Mopier and what does it do? If anyone could help that would be great.
Thank you,
Hector
01-12-2016 05:58 AM - edited 01-12-2016 05:59 AM
I think that that mopier is a portmanteau word derived from "multiple original copy".
With this mode enabled, a printer can receive one copy of a document, and print multiple collated copies.
With this mode disabled, the printer must be sent multiple copies of the print document in order to print multiple collated copies.
To use mopier mode requires that the device has some means of storing the entire print job (the size of which may be many times the size of the printer's standard memory).
This usually implies that the device must have an internal hard disk (although a few models with large main memories can mopy relatively small documents by reserving a part of this memory as a RAM disk).
So for most printers (which do not have a hard disk) the option is not relevant, and the printer driver should be made aware of this by the mopier mode setting being disabled (either manually, or through an 'auto-discovery' mechanism).
01-12-2016 06:08 AM
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06-07-2017 01:08 AM
I see I am late to the party, but here is a knowledge base article that adresses the issue.