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Linux Might See Open-Source Support For Plustek Scanners

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  • M@yeulC
    replied
    Originally posted by flockmock View Post
    I don't understand why scanners are regarded as problematic under Linux. Just scan something and let the result being sent as email attachement or some ftp upload. Most modern scanner support that. Whats the problem?
    Drivers. To do that, you need to be able to communicate with the scanner first, and you need a driver.
    And, open source drivers are better. I can't even think of a single advantage a proprietary driver might have over an open source one. (Ok, maybe I could find one, if the company is lazy, doesn't want to show its crap, or other, but not in a general, good case).

    Leave a comment:


  • M@yeulC
    replied
    Originally posted by starshipeleven View Post
    and of course vBullshittin screws up formatting even if it is inside CODE brackets.
    I wish I had seen your second post earlier, would have spared me reading the thing with the wrong formatting


    Pretty interesting. I didn't know the company, it looks like they have some pretty good products... Why not, if they have some decent open source drivers. That's the way to go!

    Leave a comment:


  • flockmock
    replied
    I don't understand why scanners are regarded as problematic under Linux. Just scan something and let the result being sent as email attachement or some ftp upload. Most modern scanner support that. Whats the problem?

    Leave a comment:


  • timofonic
    replied
    Originally posted by JensonChen;
    [url
    http://lists.alioth.debian.org/pipermail/sane-devel/2016-November/034872.html][/url]
    Dear Team, We will provide all source code to meet your point 1. About 2,3,5, we need to review our source code first. I hope this suggestion can be work. About4, I think we can put a member to watch the bug, but not full time. Best Regards,Jenson 精益求精,超越卓越. A to A+


    It seems the thread wasn't reviewed closely, as the taiwanese developer already replied. It really surprises me their very obvious English mistakes, but his "chinglish" is better than average.

    It's really disappointing a company wants to support Open Source drivers, yet isn't going to put ONE DAMN full time developer. I'm sure they have a half even for MacOS only.

    Why is this still happening? Open Source is a miracle, it works with this really pathetic support from companies...

    Leave a comment:


  • microcode
    replied
    Man, I have some film to scan, it'd be a very easy decision to go with Plustek if they had drivers in SANE.

    Leave a comment:


  • starshipeleven
    replied
    and of course vBullshittin screws up formatting even if it is inside CODE brackets.
    Code:
    Jenson- The SANE project certainly could accept your code for
    inclusion into our repository, if a few conditions are met. Namely:
    
    1. The code must be completely open and suitable for use with our
    license. No binary or precompiled code, other than possible firmware
    uploads.
    2. The code must use our sanei_* libraries for things like usb or
    threading. It should not directly use libusb or any kernel modules,
    etc.
    3. The code should be free from obvious security holes and bad
    programming practices like using gets() or mktemp().
    4. One or more members of your team need to join the SANE project so
    you can see user support requests on this mailing list and our bug
    tracker.
    5. The code must build on other platforms that SANE supports, like the
    various BSD Unixes. Generally, this just requires not calling anything
    Linux specific.
    
    Additionally, we prefer that all backends use our debugging library,
    so that an environment variable like SANE_DEBUG_PLUSTEK=10 could be
    used to enable user visible information from the backend.
    
    If you and your management can accept those terms, the SANE project
    would be glad to have your help. Additionally, your users would
    benefit from having your drivers installed out of the box with their
    distro of choice.
    
    Thanks for contacting us.
    
    allan

    Leave a comment:


  • starshipeleven
    replied
    Wow, Plustek makes high-end stuff, their main beef is company-grade hardware, and they say they have many customers on different linux distros asking for drivers.
    It does sound very weird, let's see if that engineer answers the requests of the SANE guy
    Code:
    Jenson- The SANE project certainly could accept your code for 
     inclusion into our repository, if a few conditions are met. Namely:  1. The code must be completely open and suitable for use with our license. No binary or precompiled code, other than possible firmware uploads. 2. The code must use our sanei_* libraries for things like usb or threading. It should not directly use libusb or any kernel modules, etc. 3. The code should be free from obvious security holes and bad programming practices like using gets() or mktemp(). 4. One or more members of your team need to join the SANE project so you can see user support requests on this mailing list and our bug tracker. 5. The code must build on other platforms that SANE supports, like the various BSD Unixes. Generally, this just requires not calling anything Linux specific.  Additionally, we prefer that all backends use our debugging library, so that an environment variable like SANE_DEBUG_PLUSTEK=10 could be used to enable user visible information from the backend.  If you and your management can accept those terms, the SANE project would be glad to have your help. Additionally, your users would benefit from having your drivers installed out of the box with their distro of choice.  Thanks for contacting us.  allan

    Leave a comment:


  • phoronix
    started a topic Linux Might See Open-Source Support For Plustek Scanners

    Linux Might See Open-Source Support For Plustek Scanners

    Phoronix: Linux Might See Open-Source Support For Plustek Scanners

    After writing a few days ago about Fujitsu SP scanners getting Linux support but being only provided by binary blobs, a Phoronix reader pointed out that the Plustek scanner manufacturer is looking at providing open-source Linux driver support...

    Phoronix, Linux Hardware Reviews, Linux hardware benchmarks, Linux server benchmarks, Linux benchmarking, Desktop Linux, Linux performance, Open Source graphics, Linux How To, Ubuntu benchmarks, Ubuntu hardware, Phoronix Test Suite
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