$500 not my auction ymmv
On Fri, Jun 15, 2012 at 7:26 PM, steven stengel <tosteve at yahoo.com> wrote:
I have used the Epson Workforce 645 - jammed a lot - I
returned it.
I now use the Fujitsu Scansnap S1500 to scan BYTE and other magazines.
Works great, I love it - about $500 new.
--- On Fri, 6/15/12, Chris Tofu <rampaginggreenhulk at yahoo.com> wrote:
From: Chris Tofu <rampaginggreenhulk at
yahoo.com>
Subject: relevant but OT: automatic document scanning
To: "General Discussion: On- Topic and Off- Topic Posts" <
cctalk at
classiccmp.org>
Date: Friday, June 15, 2012, 6:17 PM
I still have many many many large
tomes and other printed material, including vintage docs,
that needs to be committed to digital format. I'm always
building something, and I gathered a hodge podge of
materials in an attempt to fenagle my own document feeder
(first thought I'd use a scanner or pair, later said screw
that I'll just use a digital camera). Non destructive
scanning isn't necessarily a whole lot more difficult in my
estimation (using whatever curdled gray matter I have left),
but who needs any more complexity then is necessary, so I
opted for destructive scanning (where you rip the spine of
the book apart and jam it in the mechanism). Then strolling
through Target, I noticed the Epson Workforce 645 which
allegedly can take a stack of 30 sheets and scan both sides.
I'd prefer 30,000 sheets, but beggars can't always be
choosers. So I bought it, but have yet to open it (my ethic
states I shouldn't crack an item unless I'm somewhat
positive I'll
keep it. I _rarely_ return something I open. It bothers me
to). So I would just like to ask if any of you all have
delved into this. A piddly 30 sheet document feeder still
requires you to "be there", although I suppose I could catch
up on twiddling my thumbs at least while I reduce oh 300
books to bits and bytes.