The error message is likely a leftover registry entry pointing to a deleted Port95nt.exe. Fix:
You can often still find the self-extracting installer on developer archives like Naughter Software, but always ensure you are downloading from a reputable source to avoid modern malware masquerading as old tools.
Unless you are running a legacy industrial machine on Windows XP 32-bit with an actual parallel port device, this executable has no place on a modern computer. It is a security risk (due to kernel-level access), a stability risk (crashes/BSODs), and completely unnecessary for printing (modern printers use USB or network).
The error message is likely a leftover registry entry pointing to a deleted Port95nt.exe. Fix:
You can often still find the self-extracting installer on developer archives like Naughter Software, but always ensure you are downloading from a reputable source to avoid modern malware masquerading as old tools.
Unless you are running a legacy industrial machine on Windows XP 32-bit with an actual parallel port device, this executable has no place on a modern computer. It is a security risk (due to kernel-level access), a stability risk (crashes/BSODs), and completely unnecessary for printing (modern printers use USB or network).