Spooling, Processing, And Printing - Oce 1000C Job Management Manual

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1
1-3 Understanding job flow

Spooling, processing, and printing

To understand job flow through the Océ 1000C, it is helpful to consider the three
Spooling
main stages of printing.
—When a job file is sent over the network by a remote user or imported from
Spooling
disk, it arrives at the Océ 1000C and spools to a location on the hard disk drive. After
Processing
spooling completely, the job is held on the hard disk drive, where it awaits further
instructions from the operator.
—When the operator releases the job file, it undergoes raster
Processing (RIPping)
Printing
image processing (RIPping) at the Océ 1000C. During processing, the job file is
interpreted as a raster image. This raster image contains the data required by the
printer to print the job the way its originator intended. In the raster image, data
associated with each dot is rendered on the printer. The raster data tells the printer
whether or not to apply toner to each position on the page.
—After processing, the job typically moves on to the printing stage. During
Printing
this stage, the raster image associated with the job is transferred from the Océ 1000C
to the printer at a high speed. The raster image is then rendered onto paper, and the
job is printed.
While original job files are saved to the Océ 1000C hard disk drive, raster images are
typically deleted after printing. The operator can issue commands to save and hold the
raster image on the hard disk drive along with the original job file. Saving the raster
image to the hard disk drive offers two advantages: raster files are already processed, so
they print quickly, and each part of the raster file is still identified with a page in the
original document, so you can access individual pages of a saved raster file.

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