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1. PlutoI+(OP)[view] [source] 2023-11-27 12:26:28
Because Linux uses CUPS, which is the same print server as macOS and made by Apple, Distros often ship generic CUPs drivers for printers, that work with most printers made in the last two decades.

Apple had no choice but to make CUPs support generic printing interfaces because printer companies at the time rarely made macOS drivers, and this has benefited Linux too.

replies(2): >>jwells+X1 >>gpdere+N8
2. jwells+X1[view] [source] 2023-11-27 12:41:17
>>PlutoI+(OP)
My memory may be failing me, but it feels like “rarely supported” is a bit of an exaggeration. It was mostly a handful of consumer printer companies that were hell-bent on supporting nothing but Windows… I think Lexmark might’ve been one of them?

Any of the printer companies that made high end professional printers used by print designers, photographers, etc usually had Mac drivers for their entire printer lineup because Macs had a huge presence in world of desktop publishing, graphics design, and photography from most of latter half of the 80s all the way up through the 2000s.

3. gpdere+N8[view] [source] 2023-11-27 13:29:17
>>PlutoI+(OP)
Apple did not create CUPS, although they did hire the main developer (and buy the rights to the code) some years later.
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