![]() You just plug it into an available USB port, and the numbers come through exactly as if you'd typed them from your keyboard. This being the case, there is no need for a driver or anything. These CueCats had been hacked to disconnect the circuitry that spews out a serial number and other stuff at the beginning of each report, so it only reports exactly what it reads. Heres the MEGA archive containing the final set of resources created for Shokushus imagepack. As it happens, I ordered a "declawed" CueCat barcode scanner from an electronics supplier as a curiosity some years ago. Quote -If you have a barcode scanner, you can even skip the typing for quite a few books. Quote from: Crow on February 27, 2015, 07:58:32 PM -Data Crow is Java, should work. Was curious on how this program performs. I've looked in the Repo for Alexandria and cannot find it. I also tried GC Star and it's very god! It imports Tellico files in a snap! And it has a neat interface.:) It'll display your books in a bookshelf.:) Once you've extracted the files from datacrow_3_4_12_zipped.zip, all you need to do to launch it is run this: Quote -At least Data Crow requires no installation. ![]() However, the review states the following: ![]() That program seems like a good start, thank you :) The room that I'm using as a library is completely full, since my wife and me have the same profession we have several books duplicated, also, some are very old and the information is not relevant anymore, and that's just the technical books, the novels, collections about painting, ecology, etc. ![]()
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