There are times when it seems impossible to remove jobs from the print queue of a particular printer. This is often the case when I play with network printers and get the port settings wrongs: Windows keeps trying to send the print job to a non-existent machine and it becomes impossible to remove the job through the traditional way (cancelling or deleting it from the printer properties). I found the following to be very effective when the print job hasn't left the Windows machine. Open a Command Prompt and type: NET STOP SPOOLER CD \ CD %Systemroot%\System32\Spool\Printers (if that doesn't work try:) CD %Winroot%\System32\SpoolPrinters DIR (try to identify the .SPL file that is the problem - the date is probably a good clue) (if you CAN identify it, delete the .SPL and .SHD files (otherwise del all the .spl and .shd files) DEL *.SPL (or spcific if you can figure out which) DEL *.SHD NET START SPOOLER SourceComments YassouSaturday 22 June 2013, at 06:38 GMT+8 [X] Thanks for another great aclirte. Where else could anybody get that kind of info in such an ideal way of writing? I've a presentation next week, and I'm on the look for such information. |