I don't think shipping a binary CUPS filter you're just supposed to trust counts as good Linux support. Never buying a printer without a fully working PPD without blob dependencies.
Brother MFCs support IPP Everywhere (aka AirPrint), so you shouldn't need drivers in the first place. If the UI doesn't let you use the IPP Everywhere driver, you can add it with
One of the posters wondered why disruptive billions aren't being made by new printer companies.
Well not that long ago look what happened with disruptive scooter and ebike rental.
Those things piled up faster than landfills could handle it.
With printers billions were already made in the 20th century.
There are so many thousands of tonnes of surplus printers at any one time, a huge percentage of which have not yet been landfilled, that all I use are rescued printers and I'm in a business where the only deliverable product is paperwork.
Even though I am the pioneer of the paperless approach.
Anyway, recently things like the discontinued Brother HL-2270 series are more common as discards but have plenty of life left in the hardware.
When I got one complete with a couple new toner refills, it was a good time to add it to one of my paperless subnets. Printing which had been non-essential could then become discretionary and the actual cost per page would start at zero and stay that way for the remainder of the toner it had plus the two new cartridges. Well actually only zero compared to other printers considering the cost of the paper is the same.
I like this printer better than the equivalent HP's and Lexmark I have kept running in those offices still largely doing full paperwork output for each job.
When Windows 11 was released the Brother website posted a message having a positive outlook for compatible drivers to become available for download within a few weeks.
That did come true and it turned out better than anticipated since it was still just the same drivers that had been validated for Windows 10.
That's the kind of engineering I like.
Now they have a detailed list of all their printers supported for Windows 11 with a highly respectable array of discontinued models going back many years.
With the printer connected to a regular Windows network, wireless or not, you can fire up a Linux workstation and the printer is easily detected, although you may need to select something like USA Letter Size paper if the default is European A4.
Once again I don't recommend actually purchasing a printer when there are so many homeless needing adoption.
Whatever you're printing will look 100% better/more professional if you get someone else to print it using commercial tools.
Printers are cool if you need to quickly print some black-and-white papers in a jiffy. But anything more than that (and even that) is never going to compare to getting it properly printed.
It's like filming video with your phone: it will always pale in comparison to an actual, video-oriented camera.
What if I don't want to go out, or what if I don't care about quality and what I need isn't about quality anyway...just wanting to print an essay on paper that I can use for pen edits?
So what's the point of your commentary in this entire thread at all then? You're lack of need for printing serves no one except yourself in this thread about people and their printing needs/issues.
My experience with Brother printers has always included having to download a package containing a PPD + binary blob from their support site after someone blindly bought one because they are cheap/someone suggested them. Always check before buying if you stand by good OSS support.
Always check before buying if you stand by good OSS support.
I typically always do. I have a 20 year old HP colour laser, but it is showing its age. All the praise for Brother printers on HN, somehow short circuited, bypassed my check-it filter.
HP ships Open Source support for just about every printer they provide. (You have to bypass the pile of steps in the on-printer portion of setup that desperately want to push you into an ink subscription, though.)