Printing
WorkCentre 7755/7765/7775 Multifunction Printer
System Administrator Guide
82
Saving and Reprinting Jobs
The Reprint Saved Jobs feature allows you to save a print job on the printer so that it can be printed at
any time.
Enabling the Reprint Saved Jobs Feature
Note: If your printer is locked, you must log in as a system administrator. For details, see Initial
Setup in CentreWare IS on page 17.
1. In CentreWare IS, click Services > Reprint Saved Jobs > Enablement.
2. Under Enablement, select Enabled, then click Apply.
Saving and Printing Jobs
Saving a Job from Your Computer
1. With your file open, from your application’s File menu, click Print. The application Print window
displays.
2. Select your printer from the Printer Name drop-down menu.
3. Click Properties to access the print settings for the job.
4. On the Paper/Output tab, click the Job Type drop-down menu, then select Saved Job. The Saved
Job options display.
5. To save the job for printing later, select Save, or to both store the job and print it immediately,
select Save and Print.
6. Type in a Job Name for the job or select Use Document Name to use the file name of the
document being submitted.
7. Select the folder to use to save the job from the Save in Folder drop-down menu. You can save the
file to the Default Public Folder or you can create a new public folder to use for your job.
8. To save your job to a different folder, type the name of the folder or type a path including the new
folder name that you want to create, then click OK.
9. To save your job as a secure job, type in and retype a 4-10 digit passcode in the passcode fields
then click OK. For details on the Secure Job feature, see the User Guide at
www.xerox.com/office/WC7755_WC7765_WC7775docs.
10. Click OK to save the settings.
Note: If User Data Encryption is Enabled, saved jobs are encrypted. For details, see Stored Data
Encryption on page 73.
Saving and Printing a Job in CentreWare IS
You can save and reprint jobs from the Print tab in CentreWare IS. The job submitted must be a print
ready file, such as a PDF or PostScript file.