Tech Support > Computer Hardware > Scanners > Visioneer Strobe XP 200
Visioneer Strobe XP 200
Posted by Benton on June 28th, 2005


Hi there,

Does anyone knows if this scanner can be shared on a LAN and used by all the
computers in the network?

Or, is there any look-alike scanner capable of this?

Thanks in advance,

-Benton



Posted by CSM1 on June 28th, 2005


"Benton" <conversar@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:3ie1o6Fku6m1U1@individual.net...

Q - Can I share my computer's attached scanner with other computers on the
Network?
http://www.ezlan.net/faq.html#scanner

Why would want to share this scanner, somebody has to fed the document(s)
into the scanner. The specs say 10 seconds per page.

If you really want a network scanner search Google for "network capable
scanner" without quotes.

This software claims to share any scanner on the network.
http://www.share-scanner.com/

--
CSM1
http://www.carlmcmillan.com
--



Posted by Dances With Crows on June 29th, 2005


On Tue, 28 Jun 2005 23:15:02 GMT, CSM1 staggered into the Black Sun and
said:
Er... why would it matter what a scanner looks like? Did you mean
"scanner that has the same resolution and color response and @FEATURES
as the Visioneer Strobe XP 200"?

Yeah, that's what *I* thought. It doesn't do you much good to have a
remotely-operable scanner, since a human usually has to be near the
scanner to change the orginals. This question gets asked periodically,
and nobody who's asked that question ever seems to give a good answer as
to why this is a desirable thing.

I can think of a lot better uses for $39 than to spend it on some
proprietary garbage like that. Investigate the free alternatives before
screwing with things that cost money. Try this:

0. Hook scanner to machine1.
1. Install KDE Desktop Sharing, VNCServer (OS X) or VNCServer (Windows)
on machine1, depending on which OS machine1 is running. Run your VNC
server and set a password.
2. Run any VNC viewer on machine2. Connect to machine1 using the
password you chose in step 1. Control machine1 (almost) as if you
were sitting right at it. Profit!

Cost: $0.00 and 10 minutes. Your call, though.

--
Matt G|There is no Darkness in eternity/But only Light too dim for us to see
"Depress the button," it said. Gloria looked at the button. "You're a
very ugly button," she began. --Phil Janes, _The Galaxy Game_

Posted by Benton on June 29th, 2005



"Dances With Crows" <danSPANceswitTRAPhcrows@gmail.com> escribió en el
mensaje
news:slrndc3r14.qqn.danSPANceswitTRAPhcrows@samant ha.crow202.dyndns.org...
Yes. You got the idea.

Gee, what happened to human imagination? :-)

How about this: the scanner is connected to PC1 in the network, with a long
(sort of) cable that allows the scanner to seat on a table away from the
host PC. From PC2, I start the software, it finds the scanner, I configure
my desired settings and check the option "Scan to my PC". I then go to the
scanner, feed the documents, and back to my PC I go. The scanned files are
waiting for me at the Windows desktop.



Posted by Benton on June 29th, 2005



Thanks for the link. I will investigate the Brothers models.


Same thing with a copy machine, and we all share one. :-)



Posted by CSM1 on June 29th, 2005


"Dances With Crows" <danSPANceswitTRAPhcrows@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:slrndc3r14.qqn.danSPANceswitTRAPhcrows@samant ha.crow202.dyndns.org...
Works in Linux only. Most of us out here are Windows or Mac.

CSM1
http://www.carlmcmillan.com
--



Posted by Dances With Crows on June 29th, 2005


On Wed, 29 Jun 2005 14:47:21 GMT, CSM1 staggered into the Black Sun and
said:
....What'choo talkin' about, Willis?

VNC servers exist for Windows and all Unix-like OSes (not MacOS 9, which
is annoying). VNC viewers exist for all OSes that aren't toys and some
that are toys. (Remember, the RFB protocol that VNC uses is Open, so it
doesn't matter which OS the client or server is running.) For the last
~3 years, I've been running VNCserver (Windows) on a Windows machine
(opus2) at work. At times (like if it's 11pm, and something minor needs
to be done, and driving all the way to work would suck), I've used
VNCViewer (Linux) or VNCViewer (Windows) to control opus2. It's worked
extremely well.

But don't take my word for it. Visit http://www.tightvnc.com/ and
see what they have to say. IMHO, something like VNC is absolutely
essential for Windows machines, since the Windows CLI sucks so badly and
many Windows programs don't *have* command-line equivalents. RDP might
also work. HTH,

--
Matt G|There is no Darkness in eternity/But only Light too dim for us to see
He is a rhythmic movement of the penguins is Tux. --MegaHAL

Posted by Dances With Crows on June 29th, 2005


On Wed, 29 Jun 2005 09:03:46 -0500, Benton staggered into the Black Sun
and said:
My imagination, fertile though it is, never seems to predict what Real
Users want[0].

Seems like a long run for a short slide. Why don't you do something
like this?

0. Scanner is connected to machine1
1. Go to machine1. Feed documents. Scan documents using $SOFTWARE.
2. Using $SOFTWARE, save the scanned images to "\\machine2\somewhere\
scanned_images\" or "/mnt/machine2/scanned_images/".
3. Walk back to machine2, do whatever with images.

This requires machine1 and machine2 to be hooked to a network of some
sort. You've already made it clear that this is the case. This also
requires that machine2 be running NFS or Samba or Windows File Sharing.
That condition is not difficult to fill.

Or you can use VNC to remotely control machine1 from anywhere, or you
can use that expensive proprietary scanner-sharing thing mentioned
upthread. TMTOWTDI, after all.

[0] My favorite was when a woman brought in a desktop machine and wanted
me to set it up so it'd work with her cablemodem. The cablemodem was
in an apartment 1 mile away.

--
Matt G|There is no Darkness in eternity/But only Light too dim for us to see
Frustration is annoying, but the *real* disasters in life begin when you
get exactly what you want.


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