HP PSC 2500 HP PSC 2500 series All-in-One - (English) Reference Guide - Page 178

enter advanced authentication data, glossary of terms

Page 178 highlights

wireless network setup chapter 15 5 Select Infrastructure and click Next. The Wireless Network Name page appears. 6 Select a network name (SSID) from the list of detected networks, or enter the name of a new wireless network. 7 Click Next. The Wireless Authentication page appears. 8 Select either EAP/802.1x or EAP/PSK. 9 If you chose EAP/802.1x, select the authentication method your device will use on the wireless network, enter authentication server information, validate the printer with the authentication server, configure the necessary certificate, and enter server settings. OR If you chose EAP/PSK, enter a Pass Phrase (from 8 to 63 characters in length, including spaces) that will be used by the software to generate a pre-shared key. Note: All devices on the network must use the same pass phrase. 10 Follow the onscreen instructions to configure the HP PSC for the authentication and encryption type selected. 11 When, finished, click Next. The Configuration Review page appears. 12 Verify the information is accurate, and then click Finish. enter advanced authentication data If you are using advanced authentication methods such as EAP/802.1x (EAP-MD5, EAP-TLS, EAP-TTLS, LEAP, PEAP) or EAP/PSK (Pre-Shared Key), enter the information in the HP PSC embedded Web server prior to software installation. Enter encryption information at the same time. Note: You must have a wired connection to access the embedded Web server and configure your wireless settings prior to installation. For more information, see connect your hp psc to a wireless network or computer on page 147. For more information about entering advanced authentication data in the HP PSC embedded Web server, see enter WPA encryption data on page 167. glossary of terms term 802.3 (Ethernet) definition Ethernet is a local-area network (LAN) architecture that supports data transfer rates of 10 Mbps. The Ethernet specification served as the basis for the IEEE 802.3 standard. A newer version of Ethernet, called 100Base-T (or Fast Ethernet), supports data transfer rates of 100 Mbps. And the newest version, Gigabit Ethernet supports data rates of 1 gigabit (1,000 megabits) per second. 168 hp psc 2500 series

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hp psc 2500 series
chapter 15
168
wireless network setup
5
Select
Infrastructure
and click
Next
.
The Wireless Network Name page appears.
6
Select a network name (SSID) from the list of detected networks, or enter
the name of a new wireless network.
7
Click
Next
.
The Wireless Authentication page appears.
8
Select either
EAP/802.1x
or
EAP/PSK
.
9
If you chose
EAP/802.1x
, select the authentication method your device will
use on the wireless network, enter authentication server information,
validate the printer with the authentication server, configure the necessary
certificate, and enter server settings.
OR
If you chose
EAP/PSK
, enter a
Pass Phrase
(from 8 to 63 characters in
length, including spaces) that will be used by the software to generate a
pre-shared key.
Note:
All devices on the network must use the same pass phrase.
10
Follow the onscreen instructions to configure the HP PSC for the
authentication and encryption type selected.
11
When, finished, click
Next
.
The Configuration Review page appears.
12
Verify the information is accurate, and then click
Finish
.
enter advanced authentication data
If you are using advanced authentication methods such as EAP/802.1x
(EAP-MD5, EAP-TLS, EAP-TTLS, LEAP, PEAP) or EAP/PSK (Pre-Shared Key), enter
the information in the HP PSC embedded Web server prior to software
installation. Enter encryption information at the same time.
Note:
You must have a wired connection to access the embedded Web
server and configure your wireless settings prior to installation. For more
information, see
connect your hp psc to a wireless network or computer
on
page 147.
For more information about entering advanced authentication data in the
HP PSC embedded Web server, see
enter WPA encryption data
on page 167.
glossary of terms
term
definition
802.3 (Ethernet)
Ethernet is a local-area network (LAN) architecture that
supports data transfer rates of 10 Mbps. The Ethernet
specification served as the basis for the IEEE 802.3
standard. A newer version of Ethernet, called 100Base-T (or
Fast Ethernet), supports data transfer rates of 100 Mbps.
And the newest version, Gigabit Ethernet supports data rates
of 1 gigabit (1,000 megabits) per second.