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You've listed exactly the questions that are on my mind. There are a number
of these available, from $350 to over $10,000, as well as a "scanner server"
device for about $200 that claims to connect most USB scanners for network
use.  It's not easy to tell from the vendor information exactly how they
work. I'm hoping someone on campus has tried some variation of this and can
answer some of the questions or even demonstrate it for me.


  _____  

From: MSU Network Administrators Group [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On
Behalf Of Richard Wiggins
Sent: Tuesday, March 07, 2006 9:58 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [MSUNAG] Networked Document Scanning


Chris,
 
Can you give some insight into the mechanics of such a setup?  Would this be
for single-sheet or a few sheets, or for mass volume scanning?  In any
event, wouldn't the end use need to physically visit the device each time he
or she uses it? 
 
Network-attached printers evolved a long time ago because it's easy to
generate a print job, and pick it up asynchronously, perhaps hours later.
I'm guessing that network-attached scanners aren't as obvious a setup
because you inherently need to visit the device to start the job.  You also
need to save the output somewhere, so wouldn't a network-attached PC with a
shared drive fill the bill? 
 
/rich
 
On 3/7/06, Chris Wolf <[log in to unmask]> wrote: 

I'm looking into scanners that have an Ethernet connection to allow them to
be shared across a department or workgroup.  If anyone has this kind of
setup I'd like to hear about what you're using, how well it works, etc.
Thanks.  
 


--Chris
==============================================
Chris Wolf
Computer Service Manager
Agricultural Economics        [log in to unmask]
Michigan State University     517 353-5017